RECIPES SAVED LAST ON 8/25/99 EARLY MORNING
Sour Cream Cake
1 package white or yellow pudding-in-the-mix cake mix
1 c. sour cream
1/2 c. canola oil
4 eggs
1/4 c. sugar
1/4 c. water
Beat all ingredients for two minutes at medium speed. Bake as you usually do.
Root Beer Float Cake
Mon Aug 23 13:00:18 1999
1 box yellow cake mix
1 (12 oz) bottle root beer
1/4 cup veg. oil
3 large eggs
Root Beer Glaze
Vanilla Ice Cream
Combine first 4 ingredients, beat at low speed unitl moistened; beat at medium speed 2 minutes. Pour into greased and floured 12 cup Bundt pan. Bake at 350
degrees for 35-40 minutes or until wooden pick or skewer inserted in center comes out clean; remove from pan and cool on wire rack. Pierce top of cake at 2
inch intervals with a long wooden pick. Pour glaze evenly over cake. Cool completely before serving. Serve with ice cream.
ROOT BEER GLAZE:
1/2 Cup powdered sugar
3 TB root beer
Stir together until smooth
Re: ISO "Doctored White Cake"
Sun Aug 22 22:13:25 1999
try adding 1 teaspoon of vanilla and 1/2 cup sour cream to the usual ingredients. also, i use whole eggs not just whites.
lynne
PISTACIO CAKE
Wed Aug 11 08:55:50 1999
Here's my mom's pistacio cake. I don't usually use cake mixes, but I do when I make this cake! :) I get loads of compliments on it and ha! its from a mix!
1 Box of supermoist yellow cake mix
1 pkge of instant pistacio pudding
1/2 cup of crushed pistacios
Prepare box mix as directed, add pudding and pistacios. Bake as directed.
For my shower cake, my mom made this and iced it w/ chocolate frosting, Talk about GOOOOOOOOOOOOD!
Enjoy
Mish
Snicker's Cake
Mon Aug 9 22:23:00 1999
1 box devil's food cake mix
1 bag Kraft caramels
1 (12 oz) bag unsalted peanuts
1 (12 oz) bag chocolate chips
1 container caramel icing (or use homemade)
1 TB cream
Mix cake mix per box instructions. Pour half of mix into a greased and lightly floured 9x13 cake pan. Bake for 20 minutes, remove and cool. Melt caramels
with 1 Tb cream in a double boiler. Pour melted caramel over cooled cake. Pour chocolate chips over that. Sprinkle peanuts over chocolate chips. Top with the
rest of the cake batter. Bake 20 minutes or until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Let cool and top with caramel icing. It is rich and gooey, but
yummy!
Re: ISO - Grand Marnier Recipe
Thu Aug 12 04:37:45 1999
In place of the water use Grand Mariner! Yummy!!!!
Y2KAKE
Tue Aug 3 00:16:30 1999
I just returned from the ICES convention and Duncan Hines was passing out this delicious recipe so I want to share it with you.
CAKE
1 (18.25) package Duncan Hines Moist Deluxe White cake mix
1 1/3 cups water
3 egg whites
3 T. hazelnut spread or finely chopped hazelnuts (they used Nutella)
1 T. coffee concentrate
1/4 cup chocolate chips, finely chopped in blender or food processor
COFFEE CONCENTRATE
2 T. hot water
1T. instant expresso coffee or instant coffee
GANACHE
1/3 cup heavy cream
1/2 c. chocolate chips
FROSTING
1/2 can Duncan Hines Vanilla Frosting
1/2 T. Coffee Concentrate
Preheat oven to 350 deg. Dissolve instant expresso or coffee in hot water to make coffee concentrate. Set aside. Grease and flour 2 (9 inch) round cake pans.
In large mixing bowl, combine cake mix, water and egg whites. Beat at medium speed with electric mixer for 2 minutes. Divide batter in half. Mix hazelnut
spread and 1 tablespoon coffee concentrate into one half of batter. Stir chocolate pieces into remaining batter. pour into prepared pans. Bake 28 to 30 minutes
or until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Cool 10 minutes. remove from pans. Cool completely.
Meanwhile, in small saucepan, heat cream to a boil. In small bowl, combine hot cream and 1/2 cup chocolate chips. Let stand 1 minute. Mix until smooth.
Reserve 1 tablespoon ganache. Place on cake layer on serving plate. Spread top with ganache. Top with remaining cake layer. In small bowl, combine frosting
and remaining coffee concentrate. Frost sides and top of cake with frosting. Drizzle reserved ganache over top of cake.
Millie: I believe they were two different flavors. All I know is that it was a great cake and so easy to fix. Hey, we didn't have time to eat lunch in KC so we
visited that vendor's booth a lot!! We even gave cake to someone BarbaraR met on the street who was selling hot dogs and who had a birthday and we went
back and got him some. Crazy ole ladies!! I just came from the store and bought stuff with which to make that cake. I am going to use my icing because if I
decide to offer it for a wedding cake it would have to have my icing.
Marida
Re: cake mixes w/o puddding?
Sun Jul 4 21:15:23 1999
Linda, with that recipe I would use Duncan Hines and follow the recipe by adding pudding in the mix. Many, many years ago when I first started making
wedding cakes, Duncan Hines did make cake mixes with pudding in them and then for some reason quit. They use to make a wonderful carrot cake with
pudding in the mix. They don't even make carrot cake anymore. Both Pillsbury and Betty Crocker add pudding to their mixes. I think Duncan Hines is the only
large maker of cake mixes who does not have pudding in the mix.
Sheri
Re: cake mixes w/o puddding?
Fri Jul 2 11:45:27 1999
Hi there!
To the best of my knowledge, Duncan Hines doesn't contain pudding. I don't have any here right now to check(lots of Pillsbury though!) I'm not faithful to one
particular brand, I try to watch sales and I buy whichever of the main three brands that are on sale. I doctor all my mixes with pudding or other ingreds. and I
used to worry about adding pudding mix to cake mixes which already contained pudding. I was making a cake for family one day, so I tried it. It didn't seem
any different in taste or texture, so now I do it all the time.
Maybe someone else has had a different experience or it hasn't worked out for them. I'd like to hear from someone else who has tried this.
Re: ISO: Bailey's Irish Cream Cake
Tue Jun 22 16:40:16 1999
Here's a post by Karen from March in reply to my request for a Bailey's Irish Cream cake:
I have a recipe that I haven't tried yet: 1 box cake mix + 4oz. box instant chocolate pudding + 3/4 cup oil + 1/8 cup water + 1/4 cup vodka + 3/8 cup Bailey'd +
4 eggs. combine all ingredients and beat until smooth. Bake at 350f for 40-50 min.
I tried it and it was very good.
I used yellow and it was pretty good. The cake ended up a light brown color with good flavor. I also made a glaze of powdered sugar and just enough Bailey's
to make it a nice drizzling consistency to pour over the top.
In place of the water use bailey's!!
lynne
Re: ISO Raspberry Cake
Sun Jun 13 16:10:43 1999
i have used jello in a white mix w/good results. i have tried both mentods -- mixing the jello w/about 1/2 the usual amount of hot water and using that in place of
the liquid called for in the mix or adding the jello dry to the dry mix and proceeding as usual.
or drop dollops of good brand raspberry jam into white batter and swirl *lightly*. if you mix this too much the cake gets chewy, and tough. truly keep it a
'swirl' cake.
hope that helps you.
lynne
Barbara R.
Strawberry Cake
Tue Jun 8 10:23:49 1999
1 white cake mix
3T flour
2/3 c oil
4 eggs
1 sm pkg strawberry jello mixed w/ 1/2 c hot water
1/2 pkg. frozen strawberries (1/2 - 3/4 cup)
Mix and bake, it's delicious!
Marida
Peanutty Candy Bar Brownies
Mon Jun 7 23:07:55 1999
1 (21-ounce) package Duncan Hines Chewy Fudge Brownie Mix
1/4 cup vegetable oil
1/2 cup creamy peanut butter
3 (7-0unce) Mr. Goodbars with peanuts
Prepare brownie mix according to package directions, using 1/4 cup oil instead of 1/2 cup as package directs. Stir peanut butter into batter. Spread half of
brownie batter into an ungreased 13" x 9" x 2" baking pan. Place whole candy bars across batter. Spread remaining batter over candy bars.
Bake at 350 deg for 29 minutes. Cool completely on a wire rack. Cut into 36 squares.
Arlene
Re: Lemon Chiffon Cake from Mix
Wed Jul 7 10:45:18 1999
I have a recipe for a lemon cake from a mix that is absolutely great. It may not be a chiffon, but its wonderful.
1 yellow or lemon cake mix ( I prefer the lemon)
1 small lemon jello (not the pudding, regular jello)
3/4 cup water
3/4 cup oil
2 to 4 eggs
Mix cake mix, oil, water and eggs. Add jello last minute of mixing. 13 X 9 pan about 35-40 min at 350 degrees.
if you use 2 round pans cut down the time.
Lemon Glaze
1/2 Cup lemon juice
1 box confectioners sugar
Mix lemon juice and sugar. Immediately after cake comes out of oven, poke holes in top and glaze. (I've never used this glaze, I always use my buttercream
icing recipe and add lemon flavoring.)
lynne
pink champagne cake
Mon May 31 01:56:39 1999
***********pink champagne cake*************
1 pkg. french vanilla cake mix
2 envelopes 'dream whip'
4 egg whites
1 whole egg
1/4 cup oil
1 1/4 cup pink champagne
1 teaspoon champagne flavoring*
very small dab pink food color
*champagne flavoring is very hard to find. i have used this recipe w/o it and felt the flavor was fine.
mix and beat all ingredients together in mixer for 3 minutes. bake as usual.
ice w/dream whip flavored by using champagne instead of water.
other's comments: let champagne go flat before using (i have done it both ways -- results seem the same to me).
batter will be a blush color.
lynne
p.s. original recipe found in mail box news magazine from carole nickels.
I am not sure about the instructions for this cake. The dream whip mentioned in the ingredients - does this go in the cake? and how much do you use for icing?
Also what size pan do you usually use and temperature? Thanks.
lynne
baking instructions :)
Sun Jun 13 16:19:55 1999
sorry about that :) here's how i b ake my cakes:
preheat oven while mixing cake. set at 300 degrees (f). this is enough to make one 12X8 rectangle;or one 10 round; or one 8" sq.
yes the dream whip goes in w/the dry mix. you can stir the two together w/fork before adding to other ingredients.
grease & flour pan of choice. pour in batter and bake for 20 minutes; turn oven up to 325 degrees (f) and continue baking about 15-20 minutes more or until it
tests done by touching in the center -- if cake springs up even slighly it is done.
as for icing: you can use any non-dairy icing (rich's 'bettercreme' or 'frostn' pride' are 2 brands, but there are others). if prefereing to use dream whip i would
guess 2 packetts would be enough.
hope this helps you.
lynne
Barbara R.
recipe from crumbs
Sat May 22 20:37:40 1999
Remember some time ago I asked for suggestions to use the crumbs from a botched batch of Italian Cream Cake? I wanted bars, not cookies. Well what I
discovered is this. The crumbs combined with powd. sug and butter make a very nice "crust" to put some sort of "custard". I made lemon bars and next time
I'm going to use a cream cheese filling. You bake the crust for about 15 to 20 min. first then put the filling on and bake another 20 min. It was wonderful.
Coz
another crumb idea
Mon Jun 7 00:40:18 1999
another crumb idea is to let them set out overnight and get hard then put them in the food processer they will be like graham cracker crumb consistency and
make cheesecake crust or even use the crumbs as a nice garnish to your cakes. Put them along the sides of a already frosted cake just like you would sprinkles.
Very professional looking!
Nicole
Recipe for DateNut Cake :o)
Wed Jul 7 00:23:27 1999
I know this request was from May, but I just found this message board! :o) I have a wonderful DateNut Cake recipe and it's very simple!! Yay! Here it goes:
Mix together:
1 Box Yellow Cake Mix (I use Duncan Hines)
1 Cup Water
3 Eggs
Add to above and mix well:
1 Can Solo Date Filling (12-1/2 oz can)
1 Cup Chopped Nuts (i.e. walnuts, pecans, almonds)
Pour into prepared pan(s) and bake at 350-degrees for 35-40 minutes (recipe directions). However, I always bake at 325-degrees until toothpick inserted in
center comes out clean (makes for a moister cake).
lynne
Re: datenut cake recipe needed
Sun May 23 22:10:11 1999
hi muffyn;
i have not made one, but i think you can just add the chopped dates & nuts to what ever flavor mix you think is good......white, yellow, spice.
personally i find most spice mixes too strong, so you might want to consider mixing one spice and one yellow mix then if needed divide the mix in 2 and add
your dates & nuts. it's worth trying :)
lynne
Barbara R.
Re: datenut cake recipe needed
Fri May 21 19:16:27 1999
Have you tried cakerecipes.com??? I'll bet you can find it there. Also, I have a wonderful strawberry cake recipe that starts with a white mix, if you're
interested. I don't know what a casata (sp?) cake is.
Dolores
Re: Need a Red Velvet from mix recipe, please!
Thu May 13 17:43:40 1999
Mine is very simple.
I use a yellow butter duncan hines mix. Add the usual water, butter &eggs as box specifies.
Also add:
2 TB Hershey's powdered cocoa
red food coloring to the rich color you want. Paste coloring is best - won't add to the liquid. Maybe dissolve it in a bit of water first for easier mixing. Don't add
too much red or it gets to looking like blood.
Debra
Red Velvet Cake from a mix.
Fri May 14 19:32:31 1999
This is the recipe that I use and it is delicious!!
1 package Pillsbury German Chocolate cake
1 cup sour cream
1/2 cup water
1/4 cup oil
1 (1 oz) bottle of red food coloring
3 eggs
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Combine all ingredients on low speed until moistened; beat on high for 2 minutes. Bake at 350 for 25 to 30 minutes.
Please help!! My daughters first birthday party is on Sunday. I am attempting to make her a cake. I want a recipe that tastes like a bakery cake. I am a novice,
so please keep it simple!
Heather
lynne
Re: Please help..need recipe by 5-14-99
Wed May 12 11:58:04 1999
hi heather;
you don't give us much information. is there a special flavor you are looking for?? many of us are 'professional bakers' and find cake mixes work very well if
baked right. it's rather important to bake them at a lower temp in order to keep them moist.
so to follow up on larry's (?) post here are baking instructions:
his recipe will make 2 8" or 9" layers of cake *or* one 9"x13" pan. prepare pan by greasing w/butter or crisco, then coat that w/flour. note: if you are making a
chocolate cake, coat the 'grease' w/choco powder :)
turn on your oven to 300 degrees(f).
mix your dry ingredients together. place 'wet' ingredients in mixer bowl, then add dry. with mixer on low beat until all ingred. are wet, the turn up to high (if
using a hand held mixer) for 3 minutes. pour into prepared pan(s). bake for 20 minutes; turn oven temp up to 325 and continue baking another 15-20 or until
cake is done in the middle. test by lightly touching in center. if it springs back even a bit, it is done. cake should not have even started to pull away from sides of
pan. remove from oven and place on elevated wire rack to cool for about 10 minutes; turn out of pan onto the rack and cool completely (several hrs). now you
are ready to place it on the plate or board you are going to serve it from and ice.
if you have any ?s please don't hesitate to ask :)
lynne
Larry R.
Re: Please help..need recipe by 5-14-99
Wed May 12 11:41:27 1999
Hi Heather,
Here is a recipe that I have used with good results that I got from this board.
1 Duncan Hines Cake Mix
1 package of Dream Whip
1 cup of tap water
4 medium eggs ( 3 if large are used)
You can use chocolate or white cake for this. I hope this is what you were looking for.
Larry
lynne
yum-yum yam cake
Sun May 9 15:17:47 1999
**********yum, yum yam pound cake**************
2ea. 17 oz. cans yams, drained
1 pkg yellow cake mix
3 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice
2 lg. eggs
1 1/3 cup water*
*use drained water from cans of yam adding water to = amt.
place 'wet' ingredients in mixer bowl, (yams, water, eggs) then add cake mix. mix & bake as you would any cake.
Jeff Arnett
Italian Cream Cake from a mix
Tue May 4 11:43:15 1999
I make an Italian Cream cake from a mix using this recipe:
1 box Duncan Hine white cake mix
1/4 cup melted BUTTER [no margarine]
3 large eggs
2/3 cup water
2/3 cup Butter Milk
1 cup shredded Coconut
1 cup chopped Pecans
1 teaspoon Vanilla extract
1/4 teaspoon Almond extract
Mix all ingredients EXCEPT coconut and pecans on medium speed for 2 minutes. Stir in coconut and pecans.
Bake at 325 F until cake springs back when touched lightly in center [cake should not be pulling away from sides UNTIL REMOVED FROM THE OVEN].
Jeff, what kind of icing and filling do you use for this cake?
lynne
R: butterscotch rum ripple cake
Mon May 3 00:01:34 1999
*********butterschtch rum ripple cake***********
cake ingredients:
1 pkg. white or yellow cake mix
1 cup sugar
1 cup sour cream
1 tsp. vanilla
1 cup water
1 cup flour (all-purpose or cake)
3 whole, lg. eggs
3 teaspoons rum flavoring
ripple batter:
1 sm. pkg. *instant* butterscotch pudding
10 1/2 oz. jar butterscotch ice cream topping
1 lg. whole egg
beat 1 minute on medium speed of mixer; set aside.
blend cake ingredients together in mixer bowl; beat 3 minutes. remove 2 cups of batter to a small bowl and add ripple batter to it.
pour 1/2 of cake batter into prepared pan. spoon 1/2 of ripple batter over. marble with a knife by folding in.
repeat w/each batter.
this is enough batter to fill one 12" round; or any pan using 1 1/2 mixes.
bake in 300 degree oven 30-40 minutes; increase oven temp to 325 degrees for 30 to 45 minutes or until it tests done by touching in the middle of cake
w/finger. if it springs back it is done.
cool on wire rack about 10 minutes, then turn out of pan to finish cooling.
lynne
lynne
R: sour cream prune cake
Sun May 2 23:48:59 1999
**********sour cream prune cake**************
1 pkg. spice cake mix
3 whole lg. eggs
1/2 cup sour cream
1/2 cup water
3/4 cup chopped, cooked prunes
mix and bake as for regular cake.
lynne
doctored spice cake mix
Wed Apr 28 14:48:34 1999
********spice pound cake***********
1 pkg cake mix -- yellow or white or golden vanilla
1 cup flour (all purpose or cake)
1 cup granulated sugar
1 tsp. salt
3 whole lg. eggs
1 1/3 cup water
1 cup sour cream
1 tablespoon pumpkin pie spice
*or*
1 tsp. cinnamon
1/4 tsp cloves
1/4 tsp nutmeg
mix dry ingredients in a bowl.
in mixer bowl place remaining ingredients. add dry mixture. mix -- if using a kitchen aid mixer on #1 just to moisten, then 5 or 6 for 2 minutes; if a hand-held
start low to moisten, then on high for 3 minutes.
amount of batter is equilivent to 1 1/2 mixes and is enough to fill a 9x13 pan or 10" and 6" rounds; etc.
bake in 300 degree (f) oven for about 15-20 minutes, then turn temp up to 325 degrees (f) for about the same; until cake tests done in center (touch lightly - if
it springs back it is done).
Jeff Arnett
Carrot Cake from a Mix
Fri Apr 23 07:52:54 1999
1 box Betty Crocker Carrot Cake mix
4 eggs
1/4 cup water [or orange juice]
1/4 cup oil
1 8 ounce can crushed pineapple, undrained
8 ounces BABY FOOD carrots
1 cup walnuts
1 cup raisins
1 teaspoon vanilla
Flour walnuts and raisins with 2 tablespoons flour.
Combine all ingredients except nuts and raisins at medium speed for 2 minutes. Stir in walnuts and raisins.
Bake at 325 F until cake spring back when touched lightly in the middle.
Reene Abbott
Fruity Cookies from a Mix
Sun Apr 4 16:03:51 1999
One box lemon cake mix(with pudding if you can find it) OR
One box orange cake mix (with pudding if you can find it) OR
One box strawberry cake mix (with pudding if you can find it)
One stick of butter or margarine, melted
One egg, slightly beaten
One cup crisp rice cereal (Rice Krispies)
Mix all in a bowl and drop by rounded spooonsful onto an ungreased cookie sheet. Bake at 350 degrees for 9 - 11 minutes or until edges begin to brown. These
cookies are chewy and wonderful and look very pretty on a plate.
Dolores
Icing for the cake
Tue Mar 23 10:14:32 1999
You can make white chocolate icing (or dark by adding semi-sweet chocolate), by adding about 14 to 1/2 lb to a batch of icing which contains 2 lbs powdered
sugar. Have the icing mixing and add melted chocolate. You won't believe the different taste without the bother. The dark chocolate one tastes like mousse! Can
decorate with it too.
Marida
Butter Cake
Fri Mar 19 20:47:33 1999
1 box yellow cake mix with pudding in the mix
1 stick melted butter
1 egg
1 c. chopped nuts
TOPPING;
1 box 10X sugar
1 stick butter
2 eggs
1 tsp. vanilla
8 oz. cream cheese
Mix first 3 ingredients together with mixer. Pour into greased 9x13 pan. Put 1 c. chopped nuts over the batter. Mix topping ingredients together; pour over nuts
on top of cake. Bake at 350 deg. for 45 minutes. Freezes well.
lynne
gingerscotch cake
Wed Mar 10 14:43:52 1999
***************gingerscotch cake****************
1 pkg. yellow cake mix
1 1/3 cup water
2 lg. eggs
1 3 oz. pkg butterscotch instant pudding mix
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
2 tablespoons chopped candied ginger
1 oz. semisweet chocolate, grated
warm oven while preparing cake. 300 degrees(f).
combine mix, water and eggs in mixer bowl. beat 2 minutes. stir in remaining ingredients. bake in any pan or combination requiring 1 mix. bake 15 minutes;
turn temp up to 325 and continue baking another 15-20 minutes. test cake by touching lightly in center - if it springs back it is done.
lynne
honey orange cake
Wed Mar 10 14:37:10 1999
***************honey orange cake****************
1 pkg. yellow cake mix
1 1/4 cup water
2 lg. eggs
1/4 cup honey
1 teaspoon grated orange peel
preheat oven to 300 degrees(f) while mixing cake.
combine all ingredients in mixer bowl and beat on med for 3 minutes. bake in greased and floured 10" round (or any combination of pans that holds 1 mix) for
15-20 minutes; turn oven up to 325 and bake an additional 15-20 minutes until cake springs back when lightly touched in the middle.
ice with orange butter frosting:
1/4 cup butter or margarine;
4 cups powdered sugar
1/4 cup orange juice
cream butter; gradually add 1/2 the sugar and blend well. then gradually add remaining sugar. add enough o.j. to make a spreding consistency and beat well.
Joan
recipe-Jazzed up pound cake
Wed Mar 17 20:44:45 1999
Hi Diane, I've read that you can convert any flavor cake mix to a pound cake using this formula
1 box cake mix
1 small box instant pudding
water as called for plus 2 tbsp.
eggs as called for plus 1 more
oil as called for
1-2 tsp. flavoring
Marida
Coconut poppy seed cake
Mon Mar 1 16:12:00 1999
1 pkg. white cake mix
1/4 t. coconut extract
1/4 c. poppy seeds
3-1/2 c. cold milk
2 packages (3.4 oz) instant coconut cream pudding mix
1 carton (8 oz) frozen whipped topping, thawed
1/3 c. toasted flaked coconut
Prepare cake mix according to package, adding poppy seeds and flavoring. Pour into greased 13 x 9 x 2-in baking pan. Bake at 350 deg. for 20-25 minutes or
until a toothpick inserted near the center comes out clean. Cool completely. In a mixing bowl, beat milk and pudding mix on low speed for 2 minutes. Sread
over the cake Spread with whipped topping. Sprinkle with coconut.
lynne
chocolate macaroon bars
Thu Feb 25 16:31:57 1999
**********chocolate macaroon bars**************
1 pkg chocolate cake mix
1/3 cup butter, softrened
1 egg
14 oz can sweetened condensed milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 egg
1 1/3 cup flaked coconut, divided
1 cup chopped pecans
6 oz. pkg (1 cup) semi-sweet choco morsels
base: preheat oven to 350 degrees(f). in lg bowl, combine cake mix, butter and egg; mix until crumbly. press into greased 9x13 pan.
topping: in sm. bowl, combine sweetened milk, vanilla and egg; beat until well blended. stir in 1 cup coconut, nuts and morsels. spread over base. sprinkle
w/remaining coconut. bake 30-40 minutes.
note: center may appear loose but will set upon cooling. cool completely cut into 24 2" bars.
Leigh
Re: Creme Savers
Sat Apr 24 13:09:57 1999
Hi, Jordi.
Cream Savers are a wonderful swirled hard candy. They come in flavors like Strawberry and Cream, Orange and Cream (my favorite), and one with Chocolate,
I think. The orange tastes just like a Dreamsicle ice cream bar. I can't remember who makes them, but they're pretty popular around here (southern WV).
WalMart can't keep them on the shelves they sell so fast! :)
Leigh
Creamsicle cake
Wed Mar 3 21:42:04 1999
Hi again, Sophie,
I just found a recipe for a Creamsicle cake at
http://www.ichef.com/ichef-recipes/Cakes/33712.html
Maybe it is similar to what you're trying to make. I hope it helps you out! :)
Leigh
Jeannine
italian love cake
Tue Feb 16 14:10:33 1999
Italian Love Cake
1 box fudge marble cake mix
1 cup milk
2 lbs ricotta cheese
3/4cup sugar
1 (3.75oz) instant chocolate pudding
4 eggs
1tsp vanilla
8oz Cool whip
Mix cake as directed on box. Pour into greased and floured 9x13 pan. In separate bowl, mix ricotta, sugar, eggs and vanilla. Spoon over top of unbaked cake.
Bake at 350 for one hour. Cool. Mix pudding with milk. Fold in cool whip. Spoon over cake. Refrigerate.
Marida
Pumpkin-Pecan Cake
Sat Feb 13 23:05:33 1999
2 c. crushed vanilla wafers (about 50)
1 c. chopped pecans
3/4 c. butter or margarine, softened
CAKE:
1 box spice cake mix
1 can (16) ounces solid-pack pumpkin
1/4 c. butter or margarine, softened
4 eggs
FILLING/TOPPING
2/3 c. butter or margarine, softened
1 package (3 oz.) cream cheese, softened
3 c. confectioners' sugar
2 t. vanilla
1/2 c. caramel ice cream topping
In a mixing bowl on med. speed, beat the wafers, pecans and butter until crumbly, about 1 minute. Press into three greased and floured 9-in round cake pans.
In med. bowl beat cake mix, pumpkin, butter and eggs for 3 minutes. Spread over crust in each pan. Bake at 350 deg. for 30 minutes or until a wooden pick
inserted near the center comes out clean. Cool in pans 10 min.; remove to wire racks and cool completely. For filling, combine butter and cream cheese in a
small mixing bowl. Add sugar and vanilla; beat on medium until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes. Thinly spread between layers (crumb side down) and on the
sides of cake. Spread caramel topping over top of cake, allowing some to drip down the sides. Can be garnished with pecans.
Jennifer
Dream Whip
Fri Apr 23 11:44:09 1999
Dream Cake
I got this off of the Kraft web site. You can go thier at:
http://www.kraftfoods.com/index.cgi
1 pkg. (2-layer size) yellow, white or devil's food cake mix*
1 envelope DREAM WHIP Whipped Topping Mix**
4 eggs
1 cup cold water*
Or use pudding-included cake mix and 3/4 cup water. **Do not whip; use right from envelope.
HEAT oven to 350°F.
BEAT cake mix, whipped topping mix, eggs and water in large bowl with electric mixer on low speed until moistened. Beat on medium speed 4 minutes. Pour
into greased and floured 10-inch tube pan.
BAKE 45 to 50 minutes or until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Cool 15 minutes; loosen from sides of pan with spatula or knife and gently remove
cake. Cool completely on wire rack. Sprinkle with powdered sugar, if desired.
ALTERNATE baking pans: This cake can also be baked in the following greased and floured pans, cooling in pans 10 minutes. Two 9-inch layer pans 30
minutes. Two 8-inch square pans about 30 minutes. Three 8-inch layer pans about 35 minutes. Three 8x3-1/2-inch aluminum loaf pans 30 to 40 minutes. Two
9x5-inch loaf pans 45 minutes. One 13x9-inch pan 40 to 45 minutes. Two 15x10-inch jelly roll pans 12 to 14 minutes. 40 medium cupcake pans 1/2 to 2/3 full)
20 minutes. One 10-inch fluted tube pan 40 minutes; cool in pan 1 minutes. Three 8x4-inch loaf pans 30 to 40 minutes.
NOTE: Reduce oven temperature to 325°F when using glass baking dishes.
Nancy
Dream Whip
Fri Feb 12 13:53:28 1999
I follow the recipe that Dream Whip has for their Dream Cake on either the box or the envelope inside. So far I have had good results.
Janie
dreamwhip
Fri Feb 12 05:08:44 1999
I ue duncan hines cake mix one envelope of dreamwhip foreach batter,4eggs,1 cup of water.If you need a larger cake,than double /or triple all ingredinces the
dreamwhip gives the batter more volume thus higher cake .The cake is very moist,its beween a sponge or apound cake and just taste great.Nice texture,the
house smells wonderful.use this recipe not the one on the box,use with any flavor duncan hines mix.i hope this helps you.Happy bvaking......Janie
marcella
re: janie
Fri Feb 12 19:09:54 1999
is just the four eggs and water no oil at all to the receipe. So you not following the receipt on the box at all.
I use duncan hines all the time.
thanks Marcella
Janie
re marcella
Fri Feb 12 20:25:48 1999
Hi..Ive been a cake decorator for twenty years,enjoy
every day of that time spent doing cakes.Yesth]t i the
recipe,one d h mix,one envelope dreamwhip 4 eggs one
cup water.I use jumbo eggs,it makes a big batter.If you try this,let me know how you make out.....Janie...
Kathy
Dream Whip
Sat Feb 13 12:01:09 1999
The following recipe is the one I use for decorated cakes. It is relatively inexpensive and high in taste appeal. The layers have a protective crumb but are
unusually high in volume and fine in texture. These layers freeze well and can be made ahead of time and stored in moisture-vapor proof plastic bags in the
freezer. They will store better if crumb is left on to be removed just prior to frosting. I have found this formula to work consistently and while I do not endorse
any product I am listing the brand names for those items I have used.
Basic Cake Layers
1 Duncan Hines White Cake Mix
1 package of Dream Whip
1 cup of tap water
4 medium eggs ( 3 if large are used)
1/4 teaspoon almond
Directions
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Combine cake mix and dream whip in large mixing bowl. Blend on speed 1 or low for one minute.
Measure in standard measuring cup the tap water. Break the eggs and add to water. Measure in standard measurers the flavorings and add to the egg-water
mixture.
Add the the mixture to the cake mix all at once.
Blend the liquid and dry ingredients at low speed just until mixed, about 30 seconds - 1 minute)
Beat the mixture for 4 minutes at medium speed. Stop to scrape down the sides of the bowl at the 2 min. time.
Pour into desired shapes cake cooks in 20 plus mins.
I have enjoyed this message board so much I hope you enjoy this as well.
lynne
beer cake
Thu Feb 11 16:50:34 1999
here's something different :)
********************beer cake********************
1 pkg. spice cake mix
2 whole lg. eggs
1 1/3 cups flat beer
1 cup chopped nuts, opt.
2 cups chopped dates, opt.
pour beer into dish & allow to become flat.
combine mix, eggs & beer in mixer bowl; beat 2 minutes.
stir in by hand the nuts and dates. pour into well greased and floured tube pan. bake in 350 degree (f) oven for 45 minutes or until toothpick comes out clean.
this is a very firm cake texture.
lynne
bake in 350 degree (f) oven
Katy
German Chocolate Chip Cake
Fri Feb 5 10:57:13 1999
1 pkg. German Chocolate Cake Mix
1 (9.9 oz.) pkg. coconut-pecan frosting mix
1 cup water
1/2 cup Criso Oil
4 eggs
1 (6 0z.) pkg. semisweet chocolate mini-morsels
Combine the first 5 ingredients into a large mixing bowl and beat at low speed of an electric mixer 4 minutes. Stir in the chocolate morsels. Spoon into a greased
and floured 10" bundt pan.
Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour and 5 - 10 minutes, or until cake tester inserted into center comes out clean.
Cool in pan ten (10) minutes; remove from pan and let cool completely on a wire rack. Enjoy!
lynne
banana nut cake
Sun Jan 31 16:14:43 1999
*****************banana cake****************
1 pkg. yellow cake mix
2 small very ripe bananas
1 4-serving size pkg instant banana instant pudding
3 eggs
1 cup water
1.3 cup oil
1/2 cup chopped nuts
in mixer bowl, mash banana w/fork; add remaining ingredients, *except nuts*. blend to moisten, then beat on med speed for 2 minutes. fold in nuts.
bakes in a 9x13 pan; 2/8" rounds or 10" round.
325 degree oven (f) for about 40-50 minutes.
lynne
apricot rum cake
Sun Jan 31 16:09:38 1999
*********apricot rum cake**************
1 pkg. yellow, white or golden vanilla cake mix
4 lg. eggs
1/2 cup salad oil
2/3 cup apricot necter
1/4 cup chopped apricots (if dried, soak in rum 1 hr before using)
1/3 cup rum
2.3 cup sugar
1 /2 cup (1 stick) butter or margarine, softened
in mixing bowl combine mix, eggs, necter, oil and fruit. beat 5 minutes. pour into prepared pan(s). bake in 325 degree (f) oven 50 minutes.
remove from oven and prick all over w/long pronged fork (or skewer); pour glaze over.
glaze: combine butter, sugar, & rum in a sm saucepan. bring to a boil. pour over cake.
this cake fzs well.
Marida
WHISPER CAKE
Sun Jan 31 12:50:47 1999
1 (3 0unce) package fruit-flavored gelatin
2/3 c. hot water
4 eggs
2/3 c. oil
1 (18 1/2 ounce) pkg. white or yellow cake mix
1 7 ounce can flaked coconut
1 c. chopped pecans
Dissolve gelatin in hot water. Beat eggs and oil together in large bowl. Add cake mix and mix well. Add dissolved gelatin. Put batter into greased 13x9x2-inch
pan and bake at 350 deg. about 30 to 35 minutes. Removed from oven and sprinkle coconut and pecans over cake.
FROSTING
1 1/2 c. sugar
1 c. buttermilk
1 tsp. soda
2 T. melted butter or margarine
For frosting, mix together sugar, buttermilk, soda, and butter. Pour over hot cake and bake until coconut browns. (When putting frosting on cake, allow some
of it to run down sides of pan.)
PS. Wonder why they call this "Whisper Cake"?
Nannette
Coconut cake
Sat Jan 30 00:15:08 1999
A little while back, I was looking for a coconut cake recipe that dropped off the board somehow. I don't know that this is the same one, but it's pretty darn
good. Much better than the standard adding a box of coconut pudding to a cake mix (which is still ok, but this one is much more flavorful).
1 white cake mix
3 eggs
1/4 C oil
8 oz cream of coconut (buy where you find drink mixes)
8 oz sour cream
Mix all ingredients together; bake in greased/floured 9x13 pan for 35-40 minutes at 350 degrees (until it passes the toothpick test).
Good with a cream cheese frosting topped with flaked coconut.
Marida
coconut cake
Sat Jan 30 20:26:01 1999
Hi, Nannette: i posted that recipe in October and it had a good icing to go with it also. The frosting was:
6 bars (1 1/4 oz. each) white chocolate with almonds
4 c. confectioners sugar
8 T. evaporated milk
1 1/2 c. coconut
Melt white chocolate bars in top of a double boiler over simmering water. Remove from heat and transfer to a mixing bowl. Add conf. sugar and evaporated
milk. Beat until smooth. Place cake on serving platter. Spread frosting over cake. Sprinkle with coconut.
I never can find recipes in the archives so I make sure I print them out when they are posted and file them away.
Marida
Lemon Supreme Special
Fri Jan 29 12:02:08 1999
1 pkg. lemon cake mix
1/2 c. sugar
3/4 c. veg. oil
1 cup apricot nectar
4 eggs
glaze
Mix cake mix, sugar, oil and nectar together. Add eggs one at a time. Bake in greased tube pan at 325 deg. for 1 hour.
Glaze
1 c. powdered sugar and juice of 1 lemon
Mix sugar and juice. Pour over warm cake.
lynne
pina colada cake
Wed Jan 27 20:13:50 1999
*************pina colada cake******************
1/4 cup rum
1/4 cup oil
1 pkg. coconut cream instant pudding*
1 pkg. white cake mix
4 lg. eggs
3/4 cup water
1 cup coconut
place ingredients (except coconut) in mixer bowl; blend; beat 4 minutes. fold in coconut. pour into 2 greased & floured 9" pans. bake in 325 degree (f) oven
25-30 minutes.
cool on rack 10 minutes, then remove from pan and cool completely.
frosting:
1 sm, can crushed pineapple
1 pkg. coconut cream instant pudding
2 tblspn rum
1 (9oz.) container fz. whipped topping, thawed
combine all except whipped topping. beat until blended. fold in whipped topping.
*vanilla pudding may be used
Marida
Chocolate Praline Layer Cake
Tue Jan 26 20:39:40 1999
1/2 c. butter or margarine
1/4 c. whipping cream
1 c. packed brown sugar
3/4 c. coarsely chopped pecals
1 package Pillsbury Plus Devil's Food Cake Mix
1 1/4 c. water
1/3 c. vegetable oil
3 eggs
Topping
Pecan halves and chocolate curls for garnish
Preheat oven to 325. Grease 2 (8 or 9-inch) round cake pans. Combine butter, whipping cream and brown sugar in small heavy saucepan. Cook over low heat
just until butter is melted, stirring occasionally. Pour evenly into prepared pans; sprinkle evenly with chopped pecans. Combine cake mix, water, oil and eggs in
large bowl; beat at low speed until moistened, then beat at high speed 2 minutes. Carefully spoon batter over praline mixture in pans. Bake 35 minutes or until
cake springs back when lightly touched with finger. Cool layers in pans on wire racks 10 minutes. loosen edges and remove to racks to cool completely. To
assemble, place 1 layer, praline side up, on cake plate. Spread with half of the topping. Top with the second layer, praline side up; spread with remaining
topping. Refrigerate. Garnish as desired.
Topping: Beat 1 3/4 cups whipping cream in small bowl at medium speed until soft peaks form. Blend in 1/4 cup powdered sugar and 1/4 t. vanilla; beat at high
speed until stiff peaks form.
************pink divine cake***************
1 pkg. white cake mix
3 tablespoons flour
1 3-oz. pkg. raspberry gelatin
1/2 cup oil
1/2 10 oz pkg. frozen raspberries, thawed
4 eggs
combine mix, flour and gelatin; mix well. add remainig ingredients and beat well. pour into 3 greased and floured 8" pans. bake in 325 degree (f) oven 25
minutes. cool 10 minutes. remove from pan and ice.
raspberry icing:
1/2 cup butter
1 pound confectioners' sugar
1/2 pkg fz. red raspberries, thawed
mix all ingredients together.
store cake in frig.
personal note: i don't see why this could not also be made using strawberries or another matching fruit and gelatin.
Barbara R.
strawberry cake
Tue Jan 26 18:59:16 1999
I make this same recipe with strawberry jello and frozen strawberries all the time. It's one of my most popular flavors. You can ice it with buttercream and
decorate. And you can make it any size or shape.
lynne
swiss apple cake
Tue Jan 19 21:24:29 1999
**********swiss apple cake************
1 pkg. german chocoalte cake mix
1 21 oz. can apple pie filling
3 eggs
blend cake mix w/filling, and eggs. beat 2 minutes at medium speed of electric mixer. pour in a greased and floured 9" x 13" pan. bake in a 350 degree oven 40
to 50 minutes.
serve w/whipped cream & a dusting of cinnamon. serves 16
personal note: you could use any pan/shape desired that will take one cake mix. i also would lower temp to 325 and bake up to 1 hour.
lynne
almond cream mocho cake
Mon Jan 18 14:07:25 1999
almond cream mocha cake
1 pkg. chocolate cake mix
1 1/3 cup water
2 eggs
3 tablespoons instant espresso
filling/icing:
1/ 3 oz. pkg. instant vanilla pudding
1/2 tsp. almond extract
1 1/4 cup milk
1 cup heavy cream, whipped
1 can cherry pie filling
toasted almonds, granish
combine cake mix, water, eggs and espresso. beat on high speed of hand mixer for 3 minutes. pour into 2 9" prepared round pans and bake as directed on
pkg.* cool.
filling/icing:
combine pudding mix, almond extract and milk, beating until pudding thickens. fold in whipped cream.
assemble cake, using pudding between layers and topping cake w/pie filling; garnish w/almonds.
serves 16.
lynne
pistachio raisin cake
Fri Jan 15 02:03:25 1999
*******pistachio raisin cake**************
1 pkg. yellow cake mix
1 pkg. (4 serv. size) pistachio **instant** pudding mix
4 lg. eggs
1 cup water
1/3 cup sour cream
1/3 cup salad oil
1 cup chopped raisins
combine ingredients in mixer bowl and blend well; beat at medium speed for 2 minutes. stir in raisins. pour into greased and floured pan. bake at 325 degrees
for about 1 hr. ck cake by pressling lightly w/finger, if it springs bakc it is ready. cool in pan about 15 minutes, then remove to cooling rack.
**Note**:: for high altitude areas, add 1/3 cup flour, increase water to 1 1/3 cups and reduce oil to 1 tablespoon.
Marida
CHOCOLATE CHERRY BARS
Wed Jan 13 17:13:39 1999
1 Pkg. Pillsbury Plus Devil's Food Cake Mix
1 (21 oz.) can cherry pie filling
1 t. almond extract
2 eggs, beaten
FROSTING
1 c. sugar
1/3 c. milk
5 T. butter
1 (6 oz.) pkg. (l cup) semi-sweet chocolate chips
Heat oven to 350 deg. grease and flour 15 x 10 x 1 inch baking pan or 13x9-inch pan. In large bowl combine all bar ingredients; stir until well blended. Spread
in greased and floured pan.
Bake at 350 deg. until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. For 15x10x1-inch pan bake 20 to 30 min.; for 13x9 inch pan bake 25 to 30 min.
In small saucepan, combine sugar, milk and butter. Bring to a boil; boil 1 minute, stirring constantly. Remove from heat; stir in chocolate chips until smooth.
pour and spread over warm bars. Cool completely. Makes 36 to 48 bars.
millie
ISO: cake crumb candy recipie
Mon Aug 16 12:41:36 1999
I read (don't remember where) about a recipie using cake crumbs and white chocolate. Has anyone seen something like this. I can't remember how much of
each you need to make the candies.
I think they were mixed together rolled into balls then dipped in chocolate. Can't remember exactly. I wanted to try it since I have a 14" cake in the freezer that
fell apart.
Any other suggestions for the crumbs would also be appreciated.
Thanks, Millie
mish
cake balls
Wed Aug 18 10:39:26 1999
I was venturing back in the archives and found this yesterday, how ironic that you asked for the recipe!
Mix together:
1 1/2 c. of broken cake pieces
1/2 c. icing
Chill for 1 to 2 hours
Roll into balls
Roll balls in chocolate, sprinkles, colorored sugar, etc.
Coz
one more use
Tue Aug 17 01:00:35 1999
Dry the cake out at room temp and the food processor it into crumbs-great for cheesecake crust or to garnish the sides of your cakes!
lynne
Re: ISO: cake crumb candy recipie
Mon Aug 16 17:43:42 1999
seems to me i've seen that somewhere too........
but it shouldn't be that hard to 'wing' it. just add enough melted w/cho to moisten the crumbs and roll them into balls.
or you could use buttercream. chill after making/before dipping. or even try cr cheese......
glad to hear others have had cakes fall apart :(
happends every now & then lately :(
Marie
Another use...
Mon Aug 16 18:20:33 1999
I like Lynne's suggestions - they sound great.
I remember reading somewhere, maybe on this board, that someone mixed cake crumbs with buttercream and used that for a filling. I tried it once and
remember thinking it was good, kind of different.
Dolores
another
Thu Aug 19 12:17:04 1999
One shared by Mildred Brand of Country Kitchen IN during my classes:
Put coating chocolate in your mixer bowl, add the crumbs and beat. Roll into balls about the size of a large marble. Press on top of squares of cake or
cupckakes. Pour melted coating chocoalte over all. This is suprisingly good...nice dessert for company.
Stephany
And another...
Sat Aug 21 19:17:53 1999
I usually use mine to make trifles. My favorites for white and yellow cakes is to layer with cherry pie filling and whiped cream, and for chocolate to use
chocolate pudding and the whipped cream.
Marida
Re: ISO: White Chocolate Cream Cheese Icing
Mon Aug 16 23:23:22 1999
Here is one that I have:
1 stick butter
2 8oz. cream cheese
10 oz. white chocolate
3 lbs. sugar
1 tsp. lemon juice
Susan
Re: ISO: White Chocolate Cream Cheese Icing
Tue Aug 24 17:36:31 1999
I made this icing yesterday and divided the recipe in half. It tastes wonderful but was very difficult to spread. I used much more lemon juice than the recipe to
make it spreadable. Would decreasing the sugar make it easier to work with?
Dolores
...if I was making that...
Tue Aug 24 09:59:53 1999
I'd start with regular white cream cheese buttercream icing and add melted chocolate (1/4 to 1/2 pound). We use the cream cheese icing already made that we
sell. It is great!
Marie
? re: Ganache Beurre
Sun Aug 15 19:15:36 1999
I found a recipe for Ganache Beurre. The directions are to beat 1/2 pound butter until soft and light, then add 1 1/2 pounds cooled Rich Ganache (1 1/2 lbs.
chocolate to 1 pint cream)and beat another minute.
My question: What is the best use for this - just a filling or could you ice an entire cake? I have not tried it yet; it sounds very rich!
Thanks.
P.S. Has anyone made ganache using milk chocolate? I have a request from someone who does not like dark or even semi-sweet... she says it is too bitter.
Coz
Not just a filling!!
Sun Aug 15 22:14:23 1999
It's an awesome frosting! Great for a grooms cake-it is very dark and has a shine to it-one tip-when refridgeratored it looses some shine even when back at
room temp. I've lost count how many times I frosted with it-once everything is all together if it seems to runny(depending on the temp of your ganache) let it
sit until it is the consistency you want otherwise it is hard to frost with.
Marie
Sander's Buttercream Icing
Mon Aug 9 20:47:51 1999
Has anyone tried this buttercream version? It looks different... I may try it.
Sander's Buttercream Icing
2 cups butter
2 cups sifted powdered sugar
2/3 cup sweetened condensed milk
2 large egg whites
1/2 cup sifted powdered sugar
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 cup powdered sugar
Place butter in mixing bowl, add 2 cups powdered sugar; mix at low speed to obtain smooth paste. Whip at medium speed, adding the condensed milk until light
and fluffy.
Using a very clean bowl and beater, whip the egg whites until stiff while adding the 1/2 cup powdered sugar slowly. Mix this slowly into the above butter
mixture. Add vanilla and remaining 1/2 cup powdered sugar. This last amount of powdered sugar can be doubled if stiffer icing is desired.
lynne
Re: ISO sour cream cake made w/MIX
Sat Jul 31 19:13:14 1999
hi there;
betty crocker offers a white and chocolate sour cream cake mix. perhaps your stores don't carry it, but i can get it in central calif.
otherwise try this:
1 pkg any cake mix
1 cup flour (all-purpose)
1 cup sugar (granulated)
1/2 teaspoon salt
3 whole eggs
1 cup sour cream
1 cup water (can sub another cup sour cream if desired)
in lg bowl stir together mix, flour, salt and sugar.
in mixer bowl place eggs, s.cream, & water; add dry ingredients. stir slowly to moisten, then beat on high if using hand-help mixer. (if using kitchenaid use
med) for 2 minutes.
pour into prepared pan(s). this is enough batter to make 3 6"; 2/8"; one 12"round or one 9"x13"
bake in 300 degree oven for 25 minutes; turn oven to 325 and continue baking another 15-20 minutes.
makes a great moist cake simular in texture to a pound cake.
lynne
---------------------------------------------
FROM SCRATCH CAKES:
mish
Re: ISO: Sugar Cookie Recipe
Tue Aug 24 17:35:59 1999
I know this isn't a sugar cookie, but you may want to try it b/c it is delicious and its very dense....
Butter cookies
1 1/2 sticks of Butter
4 oz cream cheese
1 c. sugar
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla
3 1/2 c flour
cream butter and cc, add: sugar egg and vanilla. Add half the flour, then add the rest by hand. Add a little more if necessary. roll 1/4" thick
bake 375 12-15 until barely brown
Enjoy!
Bethany
Is this it?
Mon Aug 23 12:02:58 1999
Hi, Jennifer,
I did a search at cakerecipe.com and found this. I hope it's what you're looking for. :)
Bethany
Kitty Litter Cake Submitted by: Dee
Great Halloween cake!
Ingredients:
1 (18.25 ounce) box spice or german chocolate cake mix
1 (18.25 ounce) box white cake mix
2 (4 serving size) vanilla instant pudding mix
1 (12 ounce) bag white sandwich cookies
green food coloring
1 (12 ounce) bagtootsie rolls
1 new kitty litter box
1 new kitty litter box liner
1 new pooper scooper
Directions:
1 Prepare cake mixes and bake according to package directions (any size pan).
2 Prepare pudding according to package directions and chill until ready to assemble.
3 Crumble sandwich cookies in small batches in a food processor, scraping often. Set aside all but 1/4 cup. To the 1/4 cup add a few drops of green food
coloring and mix.
4 When cakes are cooled to room temperature, crumble them into a large bowl. Toss with 1/2 of the remaining cookie crumbs, and the chilled pudding. You
probably won't need all of the pudding, you want the cake to be just moist, not soggy.
5 Line kitty litter box with the kitty litter liner. Put cake mixture into box.
6 Put half of the unwrapped tootsie rolls in a microwave safe dish and heat until softened. Shape the ends so that they are no longer blunt, and curve the tootsie
rolls slightly. Bury tootsie rolls randomly in the cake and sprinkle with half of the remaining cookie crumbs. Sprinkle a small amount of the green colored cookie
crumbs lightly over the top.
7 Heat 3 or 4 of the tootsie rolls in the microwave until almost melted. Scrape them on top of the cake and sprinkle lightly with some of the green cookie
crumbs. Heat the remaining tootsie rolls until pliable and shape as before. Spread all but one randomly over top of cake mixture. Sprinkle with any remaining
cookie crumbs. Hang the remaining tootsie roll over side of litter box and sprinkle with a few green cookie crumbs. Serve with the pooper scooper for a gross
Halloween dessert.
Makes 20 servings
Dora
Re: Marida's Buttercream Frosting
Sat Aug 21 10:14:28 1999
It is on the Dec. Problems page - under "icing cracks", but I will post it here ---2 C. Crisco, 2 C. real butter, 2# pwd. sugar and 2 tbls. clear vanilla. Enjoy!
Re: Merida's icing question...
Sat Aug 21 15:22:20 1999
Hi, Karen,
I can't answer your question about adding meringue powder to Marida's icing, but I do know that you can add more powdered sugar to stiffen it to make roses.
In fact, my 1st successful rose was made with this recipe. I let it air dry for a while and was able to handle it with no problems whatsoever.
Dolores
2 recipes
Fri Aug 20 16:22:08 1999
Here are 2 recipes I got somewhere:
-----
---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: Girl Scout Mint Cookie Recipe
Categories: Cookies
Yield: 4 servings
-JOHN STROBL (GHSW12A)
2 lb Candy coating
1 pk RITZ CRACKERS
PEPPERMINT OIL
INSTRUCTIONS: TAKE THE choc. & MELT IT IN THE MICROWAVE, ADD A DASH OF THE PEPPERMINT OIL & STIR. DIP THE CRACKERS INTO
YHE choc. & SHAKE OFF THE EXCESS. PUT ON SPRINKLES IF YOU LIKE ON THEM & PLACE ON WAX PAPER IN THE FREEZER TO SET.
REMOVE & THEY CAN BE STORED IN BAGGIES IN THE FREEZER.
-----
---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: Girl Scout Mint Cookies
Categories: Cookies
Yield: 1 servings
-TERESA DEMARCO (RCNV80A)
From: Gloria Pitzer
18 oz Devil's food cake mix
2 Eggs
2 tb Water
2 tb Cooking oil
4 tb Instant Postum drink powder
1 1/2 ts Peppermint extract
1/2 c Hershey's cocoa powder
2 tb Sugar
12 oz dark chocolate coating
Blend all ingredients mixing well to form a smooth dough. Shape into ball.
Chill 30 mins. Form chilled dough into sm balls using 1 level tb per ball.
Place on ungreased cookie sheet 2" apart. Flatten W/ bottom of drinking glass first pressed against cookie dough & then dipped in granulated sugar.
Dip glass into sugar each time you flatten a cookie. Bake in preheated 400o oven 8 mins. Remove cookies from pan at once & immediately flatten each W/ back
of a smooth metal spatula. Meanwhile in top of double boiler over HOT not boiling water, melt 12 oz dark chocolate coating. Dip each cookie in melted
chocolate to coat.
Chill on waxed paper lined cookie sheet till coating is set. Makes about 6 doz. cookies.
-----
Marida
German Chocolate Cake & Icing
Wed Aug 18 22:11:40 1999
1 (4 ounce) package sweet baking chocolate
1/2 cup water
1 tsp. vanilla
1 cup butter or margarine
2 cups sugar
4 eggs, separated
3 cups sifted cake flour
1 tsp. soda
1/2 tsp. salt
1 cup buttermilk
Coconut-pecan frosting
Combine chocolate and water, bring to a boil, and stir until
chocolate melts. Cool, stir in vanilla.
Cream butter, gradually add sugar, beating until light and fluffy. Add egg yolks, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Add chocolate mixture, beat until
blended.
Combine flour, soda and salt, add to creamed mixture alternately with buttermilk, beginning and ending with flour mixture. Beat egg whites (at room
temperature) until stiff peaks form, fold into batter.
Pour batter into 3 greased and floured 9-inch round cake pans. Bake at 350 deg. for 30 to 35 minutes. Cool in pans 10 minutes; remove from pans, and cool
completely. Spread coconut-pecan frosting between layers and on top and sides of cake.
Coconut-pecan frosting
1 1/3 cups evaporated milk
1 1/3 cups sugar
4 egg yolks
2/3 cup butter or margarine
1 1/2 tsp. vanilla
1 1/3 cups flaked coconut (1 small cake is the same)
1 1/3 cups chopped pecans
Combine milk, sugar, egg yolks, and butter in a heavy saucepan; bring to a boil and cook over medium heat for 12 minutes, stirring constantly. Add vanilla,
coconut, and pecans; stir until frosting is cool and of spreading consistency. Enough for one 9-inch cake.
Re: German Chocolate Cake
Fri Aug 20 16:33:05 1999
We change a lot of things with German Chocolate. Lovers of the real thing still like the pecan-coconut filling. Personally, I like the German Chocolate with
white chocolate mousse and we sell a lot of that. I have even used the German Chocolate cake as part of a wedding cake and used my icing to ice it in order to
incorporate it into the rest of the wedding cake.
Claudia
Re: Sunshine Cake
Mon Aug 16 23:47:04 1999
All the "Sunshine" cake recipes I found used yolks and whites but I have a recipe for "Gold Cake" from the old Settlement Cookbook:
1/2 c. butter
1 c. sugar
4 egg yolks
1 tsp. vanilla
1/2 c. milk
2 c. cake flour
3t. baking powder
Prehaeat oven to 350 degrees. Cream butter well, add sugar, continue beating, add lightly beaten yolks and vanilla. Mix thoroughly, then add milk altrnately with
the combined flour and baking powder.Place in greased and floured 9" square or two 8" layers. Bake 35-45 minutes.
Allison
Re: ISO Daquise?
Sun Aug 15 21:02:56 1999
Dacquoise
2.5 oz toasted & peeled almonds
2.5 tsp all-purpose flour
5 egg whites
2/3 tsp cream of tartar
1 1/4 cups sugar
Preheat oven to 250. Trace 2 10" circles onto 2 sheets of parchment paper - one on each - and place on cookie sheets.
Place the nuts and flour in a food processor and pulse until nuts are finely ground. Set aside. Beat egg whites in mixer until frothy. Add cream of tartar and beat
on med-high until soft peaks form. Gradually add sugar and beat until stiff peaks form. Fold in the nut mixture.
Pipe the mixture onto the circles.
Bake for 60-70 minutes. Turn off oven and leave for at least another hour - overnight is best.
Michelle
Lemon Chiffon Pie
Mon Aug 16 09:40:20 1999
Lemon Chiffon Pie
9" Graham Cracker Crumbs Crust
1 Envelope Unflavored Gelatin
1 c. Sugar
1/8 tsp. Salt
4 Eggs (Separated)
1/3 c. Lemon Juice
2/3 c. Water
1 tsp. Grated Lemon Peeled
1/2 c. Heavy Cream, Whipped
Gelatin, 1/2 cup sugar, and salt, combine and mix well. Beat egg yolks, lemon juice, and water together. Stir into gelatin mixture and cook, stirring constantly
over medium heat about 5 minutes or until mixture comes to boil. Remove from heat mix in lemon peel and chill till part set. Beat egg whites until soft peaks.
Add 1/2 cup sugar, fold into lemon mixture. Put in shell, chill several hours.
Michelle
Chocolate Chip Cheesecake Supreme
Mon Aug 16 09:39:38 1999
Chocolate Chip Cheesecake Supreme
1 c. Chocolate Wafer Crumbs
3 T. Margarine (Melted)
* * *
3 8 oz. pkgs. Cream Cheese (Softened)
3/4 c. Sugar
1/4 c. Flour
3 Eggs
1/2 c. Sour Cream
1 tsp. Vanilla
1 c. Mini Semi-Sweet Chocolate Pieces
Combine crumbs and margarine; press on to 9-inch spring-form pan.
Combine cream cheese, sugar and flour, mixing at medium speed on electric mixer until well blended. Add eggs, one at a tim, mixing well after each addition
blend in sour cream and vanilla. Stir in chocolate pieces; pour over crust. Bake at 325 deg., 55 minutes. Loosen cake from rim of pan; cool before removing rim
of pan. Chill. Garnish with whipped cream and fresh mint, if desired.
Makes 10 to 12 Servings
I S O a recipe for a lemon sauce that you would pour over pound cake, My Mom said her Grandmother use to make it.
Selina
Re: Lemon sauce
Mon Aug 16 09:44:01 1999
This sounds like what your looking for.
juice of 2 lemons, Zest from 1 lemon, 2 heaped tbsp of sugar, 1 heaped tsp arrowroot (don't know what to substitute that with).
Make lemn juice up to 10oz. Blend arrowroot with alttle of the liquid. Heat the remaining liquid with the zest and sugar, pour onto the paste. Mix. Pour back into
the pan and cook, stirring until sauce comes to a boil and thickens. Simmer for 3 minutes.
Brings back memories of school lunches, yum, yum.
Coz
Lemon Curd Receipe
Mon Aug 16 11:57:42 1999
4 large egg yolks
1/2 cup plus 2 Tbsp. sugar
juice of 3 large lemons
4 Tbsp butter
2 tsp. lemon zest
first zest the lemons-than microwave the lemons for 30 seconds-this makes them extra juicy!!
In saucepan mix the yolks and sugar then add the juice and butter-stir consistantly until thick-this takes a while if using a candy therm 196F. When you see the
first sign of boiling pull the pan otherwise you will have scrambled eggs in your curd. Next pour the curd thru a strainer into a glass bowl cover and
refridgerate-then pull it out and add the zest and stir-For a warm sauce you could use it right away it would be much thinner. I use this receipe tons-it makes a
great filling for lemon cake and then I slice a variety of fresh fruit and place on top of the curd. I do this on the top of the cake also it is so pretty-this is my
most popular cake I make!! Also, this curd is great if you want lemony icing just mix some in-I mix it in Italian buttercream!! Hope you enjoy this receipe as
much as I do. Oh, also you can double,triple, whatever as much as you want!!!
Coz
Another receipe
Wed Aug 18 01:54:09 1999
1 lb UNSALTED butter room temp.
1 Cup sugar
1/4C water
5 large egg whites
1/2 tsp cream of tarter
In a non stick small sauce pan bring 3/4 c of sugar and the 1/4 C of water
to boil-using a candy therm stir occassionally, you want to bring this to a
boil to the firm ball stage which is 248-250F (After making this a few
times you won't need the therm. you will know by looks!) While that is
boiling whip you egg whites up to soft peak add the remaining 1/4 C sugar
and the cream of tarter. ( the egg whites will be done before the boiling
stuff-that's ok just stop the mixer)
Once the boiling stuff is ready start the mixer on mix speed and slowly
pour the boiling mixture into the egg white stuff. Keep the mixer going
until everything cools down-feel the bottom of the bowl this can take up to
10 min. than add 1 TBSP at a time of the butter using the whole pound up.
Don't get discouraged it will look all curdly like you messed up-you
didn't. Keep the mixer going! It will all take!
This is an awesome receipe to add flavors to! At the restaurant we use it
as is but every once in a while we add about 2 Tbsp of the liquor of choice.
This is a real white looking frosting it is nice on wedding cakes=just not
outdoor hot day wedding cakes!
Master this receipe and you will open a whole new door to flavors!!!!!
Karen
Bacteria?
Wed Aug 18 12:47:01 1999
Ok, I understand the recipe, but what about the bacteria in raw eggs? I realize that you are putting very hot stuff into the egg whites, but you are also whipping
it and therefore cooling it down so it doesn't cook the eggs. Do you worry about food poisoning?? To properly kill the bacteria you have to reach a certain temp
for so long, I don't think that this recipe acheives this.
Sorry for sounding like a ditz, but I am really freaky when it comes to dealing with eggs, and don't want to get anyone sick. Could you use merangue powder
instead of whites?
Coz
Re: Bacteria?
Thu Aug 19 04:50:11 1999
I used to be the same way-I held off years from trying this kind of receipe-trust me the eggs cook-that syrup is hotter than boiling water-I mean hot!! It cooks
the eggs-try it-The eggs get so hot it takes quite a while for everything to cool down so you can add the butter. Steam comes out of the bowl even!
Susan
Italian Meringue Buttercream Recipe
Tue Aug 17 15:58:19 1999
Karen: I hope this is the recipe you are searching for. I got it from this message board.
(Meringue-Type Buttercream) From: Joyce: Jan 22, l999
Italian Meringue:
1 lb./500g sugar
4 oz./125 ml water
8 oz./250g egg whites
1 lb./500g. butter
4 oz./125g emulsified shortening
1 tsp./5ml lemon juice
0.5 oz./7.5ml vanilla
Procedure:
Make the meringue (see procedure below). Whip until completely cool.
Cream the butter, shortening, lemon juice and vanilla until soft and light.
Add the meringue, a little at a time, blending it well.
Italian Meringue Procedure:
Heat the sugar and water in a saucepan until the sugar dissolves and the mixture boils. Boil until a candy thermometer placed in the syrup registers 240 degrees.
While the syrup is cooking, beat the egg whites in a mixing machine until they form soft peaks.
With the machine running, very slowly beat in the hot syrup.
Continue beating until the meringue is cool and forms firm peaks.
Tips: (from Joyce) I don't start beating my egg whites until the syrup reaches 230 degrees. Do not overbeat your egg whites before adding syrup. It took me a
couple of trys to really know SOFT peaks. I also put the syrup pan from stove into bowl of ice water to stop cooking procedure. I also do not pour syrup while
beaters are going. I add a little bit and then beat. Turn off and do it again until all the syrup is in the bowl.
The above pipes beautifully and really lasts.
Shirley C.
Re: ISO Cream filling
Thu Aug 12 23:20:30 1999
Twinkie filling From Dolores recipe page is great.
TWINKIE FILLING
· 1 cup Milk
· 5 TB Flour
· 1 cup Sugar
· 1/2 teas Salt
· 1/2 cup Crisco
· 1/2 cup Butter
· 1 teas Vanilla
· 1 teas Almond
Mix flour with milk. Bring to a boil and cook until thick. Cool Beat until somewhat fluffy. Then one at a time add; sugar, salt, Crisco, butter, vanilla and almond
extracts, beating well after each addition. Refrigerate at least one day to develop flavor. Fill cupcakes or between cake layers. Can be frozen.
ISO Caramel filling
Wed Aug 11 21:50:15 1999
I am in search of a filling (caramel) for a wedding cake a bride requested. Can any one help? Thanks, Darla
Allison
sorry, let me try again
Thu Aug 12 11:02:38 1999
4 cups heavy cream
4 cups sugar
2 cups water
1 lb unsalted butter
Pour the cream into a large saucepan and scald. Set aside, keeping warm.
Combine the sugar and water in a large saucepan and stir to combine. Place over medium heat and bring to a boil - do not stir, only swirl the pan occasionally.
Boil until the mixture is amber colored and remove from heat. Slowly pour the caramel into the warm cream. If it boils up, use a whisk to stir it down, and if it
hardens, melt it over low heat and stir until smooth.
Cool in the pan for ten minutes, then leave to cool in your mixer bowl overnight in refrigerator (not too cold!)
When ready to finish beat with balloon whip attachment until smooth and add soft butter 2 tbsp. at a time. Whip on high until soft and creamy.
Hope this helps!
Darla
Caramel filling
Thu Aug 12 22:56:20 1999
Alison, can this filling be used between cake layers for a wedding cake? Does it whip up like the consistency of frosting? The wedding isn't until next year, so I
have plenty of time to work on this. Thanks, DArla
Allison
Re: Caramel filling
Thu Aug 12 23:04:53 1999
Yes, you can definetely use it to fill cake layers - it even works for piping basic borders. Since you have a while before the order is due I suggest that you try
the recipe for yourself - it is a little bit fussy about the temperature when you are preparing it (if you try to whip it when it's too cold it won't budge - if it is too
warm it gets soupy), but after you add the butter it does fine. Good luck!
Coz
Re: ISO Caramel filling
Thu Aug 12 04:49:48 1999
I've never done this in a cake but here are some fast carmel receipes. The Marzetti(sp) apple dip in the produce section of the grocery store. Just microwave
and spread otherwise melt down 1 bag of kraft carmels with a small can I think they are like 4 Oz. of evap milk. Or also, in the ice cream topping
section-carmel topping and thicken with flour. HOpe this helps!!
Dolores
Re: ISO Caramel filling
Thu Aug 12 09:59:39 1999
I think that apple dip would ooze out. But we carry a wondeful caramel icing that would work.
lynne
Re: ISO:Strawberry Pie
Tue Aug 10 11:29:39 1999
i don't have a specific recipe but it would be easy to 'throw' one together.
make a cream cheese, egg and milk batter.
line pie pan w/pastry; pour in batter. bake until firm.
top w/fresh berries and glaze.
hope this inspires you.
lynne
lynne
recipes
Tue Aug 10 18:36:14 1999
i would guess anywhere from 2/3 to 1 cup on the milk. as for the cr ch depends how strong a flavor you'd want anywhere from 3 to 8 oz.
i found 2 recipes you might want to try.
the 1st one is for 'raspeberry' pie, but i see no reasone it would not work for strawberries.
'red raspberry-cream cheese pie'
1 baked pie shell, 8 1/2"
3 oz. pkg. cr. cheese (let soften at room temp)
1/3 c whipping cream
1 qt. fresh red raspberries
1 & 1/2 cup sugar
3 tablespoons cornstarch
1/2 cup pineapple juice
let baked pastry shell cool.
blend cr cheese & whipping cream. spread over bottom of pie shell. chill.
wash & hull berries. reserve 1/2 of the nicest ones. mash remaining berries, add sugar & let stand about 1 hour. force mashed berries through sieve to get juice.
blend in cornstarch w/pineapple juice. cook over low heat until thickened & clear, stirring constandtly. remove from heat; let cool. spread over cream cheese
mixture in pie shell. garnish w/remaining raspberries. chill. serve 6 to 8.
source: lucille luehmann, minnesota
'french strawberry glace` pie'
baked pie shell
1 cup water
1 cup sugar
1 qt. strawberries
3 tablespoons cornstarch
3 oz. pkg cream cheese, softened
wash, drain & hull berries. simmer 1 cup berries w/2/3 cup water; boil about 3 minutes. blend sugar, cornstarch & 1/3 cup water; add to boiling mixture. boil 1
minute, stirring constantly. coool. spread cheese over bottom of cool pie shell. save out 1/2 cup choice berries; put remaining 2 1/2 cups berries in baked shell;
cover w/ cooked mixture & garnish w/ 1/2 cup berries. refrigerate until firm; about 2 hrs. serve w/sweetened whipped cream or ice cream.
source: carol aiello, n.y.
hope these are what you are looking for.
let us know how they turn out. i have not made either.
lynne
Marie
Sponge Cake Recipes
Wed Aug 18 00:28:04 1999
Hi Margaret!
I was pleased when I saw these recipes in our newspaper on Sunday as I had remembered your request. I am happy to post them; I am very new at cake
decorating and am not able to offer ANY advice on this board. I enjoy reading and learning and appreciate everyone's generousity in sharing tips and advice. I'm
glad that, even in a small way, I am able to contribute!
I am posting two recipes below (then if you print them out, you don't have to read this message!). The author of the recipes (Beatrice Ojakangas) is a Chef. She
stated that these two recipes are ones that she grew up with on her family farm. I have not tried either one yet, but I think I will... I'm getting hungry just
thinking about them!
Marie
OLD FASHIONED SPONGE CAKE RECIPE
Wed Aug 18 00:07:20 1999
OLD FASHIONED SPONGE CAKE
4 eggs, separated
2/3 c. cold water
1 c. sugar
1 1/2 c. cake flour
1/4 t. salt
1 t. lemon extract
1 t. cream of tartar
Preheat oven to 325 degrees. In a large bowl, combine the egg yolks and water. Beat with an electric mixer at high speed 5 minutes until the mixture is very
fluffy and pale yellow. Gradually add the sugar and beat 4 minutes longer at high speed, again until mixture is very light and fluffy.
Sift flour and salt together into a medium sized bowl. Add to yolk mixture with the mixer at low speed. Blend in lemon extract.
In another bowl, with clean beaters, beat egg whites until frothy. Add cream of tartar; beat until whites are stiff but not dry. Using a spatula, gently fold whites
into the yolk mixture. Turn batter into an ungreased 10 inch tube pan or three 8 or 9 inch round cake pans. Bake 60 60 65 minutes for a tube pan, or 25 to 30
minutes for layer pans or until golden and top springs back when lightly touched.
Immediately invert tube pan over a funnel or bottle, let hang until completely cool. Cool layer cakes in pans on racks. Remove cooled cakes from pans.
Marie
HOT MILK SPONGE CAKE
Wed Aug 18 00:16:50 1999
HOT MILK SPONGE CAKE
1 c. milk
1/4 c. butter
1 3/4 c. sugar
1 t. vanilla
4 eggs
1 3/4 c. flour
1 T. baking powder
3/4 t. salt
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Lightly grease a 9 x 13 pan. In a small saucepan, heat milk to scalding. Add butter to the milk and set aside. In a large bowl, mix
the sugar, vanilla and eggs; beat 2 minutes at high speed with electric mixer until thick and lemon colored.
Add flour, baking powder and salt. Beat 1 minute at low speed. Add the milk mixutre; beat 1 minute more at low speed. Pour batter into the prepared pan. Bake
30 to 35 minutes or until toothpick inserted into the center of the cake comes out clean. If desired, frost with Caramel Frosting while still warm.
CARAMEL FROSTING
2/3 c. firmly packed brown sugar
1/2 c. half-and-half or evaporated milk
1 c. flaked coconut
1/2 c. chopped walnuts or pecans
Combine the brown sugar and half-and-half in a medium saucepan. Heat to boiling; cook 3 minutes. Stir in coconut and nuts. Spread over cake.
Selina
Victoria sponge
Tue Aug 10 23:35:43 1999
Do you think a Victoria sponge recipe will do. Its easy as its all egual amounts. example:-
4 oz of butter, 4 oz sugar, 4 oz self raising flour, 2 eggs (average egg weight 2 oz each = 4 oz for 2) 4 drops of vanilla and 1 tsp baking powder. Mix
altogether, bake 25 -30 mins at 325. This amount does two 7"pans. This is a typical english sponge but since I've found these wonderful cakes mixes here I no
longer bother with that recipe.
Linda
mints
Mon Aug 9 17:32:09 1999
Have any good recipes for mints for bridal showers, etc..
Dora
Re: mints
Mon Aug 9 22:23:32 1999
I have used the pastel colored candy melts, flavored with oil flavorings (peppermint, spearmint, wintergreen, etc.) in the plastic candy molds. Many shapes are
available - I like the rose and leaf shapes. Use white melts to make lighter colors if necessary.
Dolores
Re: mints
Wed Aug 11 16:21:42 1999
Dora's mints are really chocolate (vanilla-flavored---I use Merckens brand...'melts' are Wilton's brand...more costly, not better). Mine are real butter mints.
Chocolate mints go in a dif. type of mold. takes only 1 hour to make 100
Carolyn
Re: mints
Wed Aug 11 22:31:00 1999
I make cream cheese mints and all my customers love them. Instead of molding them (this is very time consuming when you are on a hectic schedule), I roll
the cream cheese mixture out like pie dough and cut the mints with heart shaped cutters for weddings. There are also other small cutters called canape or aspic
cutters. I can usually make 300-400 in an hour. I make them in the colors of the wedding or event. If you need any more information, just ask.
ann
ISO: Icing to pour on cookies
Mon Aug 9 13:07:19 1999
Hi...I've made cookies on stick before and poured an icing over them that hardened and made it very easy to decorate the cookies. I can't remember, however,
which icing recipe I used. I would prefer not to have to cook anything on the stove. Any suggestions would be appreciated. Thanks, ann
Shirley C.
Re: ISO: Icing to pour on cookies
Tue Aug 10 13:34:28 1999
When I was doing WIlton's cookie decorating contest, I found the easiest was just to make a stiff royal icing and thinning it by adding corn syrup. I didn't pour
it, I just put it on with a knife, and when it set, it ran togethre and was smooth and shiny.
I can't remember how much corn syrup to add, but I just stirred the icing in the bowl, and then moved the knife from one side of the bowl to the other. This
made a little vally in the icing, and then I counted to see how long it took for the icing to settle and fill the vally. You want it to fill the vally, but not so quick as
to run off all over. I hope this makes sence. It is almost like doing color flow or sugar runs.
The icing you said you used, was too thin in color and the cookie was showing through. I add a few drops of whitener to the icing when making petti-fors It
works to give better coverage. That's if you are into pastel colors.
Maybe this will help some.
MISH
Re: ISO: Icing to pour on cookies
Mon Aug 9 15:09:42 1999
In the 1999 Wilton year book, I think on Page 85 there's a recipe for poured cookie icing.
It goes something like this:
1 c confect
2 tsp milk
2 tsp light corn syrup
sift confect
mix confect and milk
add corn syrup
add more corn syrup to you reached the desired consistancy.
maybe someone else can be more exact. I don't have the book at my work.
Mish
ann
I tried...
Mon Aug 9 23:14:45 1999
Last week I tried the one on page 92 of the Wilton Yearbook (1-1/4 cups confec. sugar and 3T milk)...it was a big flop. When I poured it on the cookies it was
too runny. It tried pouring more and it just dried translucent (so you could still see most of the cookie). I know the recipe I used in the past was from
Wilton...do you think your proportions are accurate and I can try it with the different proportions and the added ingred (corn syrup)? Thanks, ann
Mish
Re: I tried...
Wed Aug 11 08:51:10 1999
Hi!
I'm quite sure I have the recipe right. I used a lot more corn syrup than it calls for, about triple the amount to get the consistancy I wanted. I made it in large
amounts. I used a 2 lb bag of confect (make sure you sift it!) About 3 Tbs of milk and about 1/2 c. of corn syrup! I spread it on with a knife, b/c I don't like
the way it looked running off the sides. It's self leaveling, then I let it dry for a couple of hours and decorated it with tip #2.
dee
Re: I tried...
Mon Aug 9 23:44:53 1999
ann..
try less milk. that sounds like alot of milk to that sugar proportion.
since you've done this before, maybe start with 1-2 tsp. milk and gradually add more if needed. you'll be able to "feel" it if it's right.
good luck.
margaret
Re: I tried...
Fri Aug 13 22:33:23 1999
Think this icing would be ok to place a frosting sheet ontop of?? I need to do this with 3 doz. cookies...have to put a paticular image on them...am using the
frosting sheets & Kopyjet...had a recipe before..but I cant find it!!
Sophie
question for Mish
Mon Aug 9 17:45:59 1999
Is this the recipe that you use for your wedding cookies? Also, did you see the Martha Stewart that featured the monogram cookies? Very cute idea for
weddings!
MISH
Re: question for Mish
Wed Aug 11 08:44:45 1999
Hi!
Yep, Its the recipe... it worked like a dream!
I missed the M.S. cookies... where are they? This is a dumb question, but does she have a magazine or something? I have her entertainment book... no cookies
in there :(
Beth W
Martha Stewart's Monogrammed Cookies
Wed Aug 18 01:37:49 1999
I hope it's not too late for you to read this message, but I'm catching up on some areas of this site I don't always have time to visit...
Martha Stewart has a web site (www.marthastewart.com) then click on recipes, then go to previous week. The monogrammed cookies were from July 28.
they remove month-old information, so look quick!
For the cookies, she basically said to use a clean rubber stamp (FYI, a "stamper" friend of mine said to never use soap on the rubber, as it will make it break
down faster. So be sure to use stamps you're only using for food). stamp the rolled out cookie with an initial, then sprinkle colored sugar in the indentation.
Then bake. They looked pretty good!
Anonymous
Small Correction
Thu Aug 19 15:27:11 1999
Small Correction: The colored sanding sugar is sprinkled on AFTER cookies are baked and cooled.
Press the rubber stamp initial in to the cookie, then bake. When the cookie is cool, Martha used a small paint brush, dipped in very thin royal icing, painted the
imprinted initial, sprinkled the colored sanding sugar on, then tapped out the excess. She also painted a thin edge around the cookie, and then rolled in colored
sanding sugar.
Stephany
Re: ISO - Cheesecake recipes
Tue Aug 10 14:14:10 1999
Here are two that I realy love, in fact I'm getting ready to make the lemon one again today for the county fair, so it may soon be a blue ribbon recipe!
Pumpkin-Swirl Cheesecake
Serves: 16
Work Time: 30 minutes
Total Time: 1 1/2 hours plus
chilling
8 cinnamon graham crackers (each 5" by 2 1/2") or 1 cup graham-cracker crumbs
2 tablespoons margarine or butter (1/4 stick), melted
3 8-ounce packages cream cheese, softened
1 cup sugar
1/3 cup brandy or rum
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
4 large eggs
1 16-ounce can solid-pack pumpkin (not pumpkin-pie mix)
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground allspice
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 8-ounce container sour cream
1. In food processor with knife blade attached or in
blender at medium speed, blend graham crackers
until fine crumbs form.
2. Preheat oven to 325 degrees F. In 9" by 3"
springform pan, with fork, stir graham-cracker
crumbs and melted margarine or butter until
moistened. With hand, press mixture onto bottom
of pan. Bake crust 10 minutes. Cool completely in
pan on wire rack.
3. Meanwhile, in large bowl, with mixer at medium speed, beat cream cheese until smooth; slowly beat in sugar. With mixer at low speed, beat in brandy,
vanilla extract, and eggs just until blended, scraping bowl often with rubber spatula.
4. In medium bowl, mix pumpkin, cornstarch,
cinnamon, allspice, and salt. Stir half of
cream-cheese mixture into pumpkin mixture until
blended. Stir sour cream into remaining
cream-cheese mixture.
5. Reserve 1/2 cup pumpkin mixture. Pour
remaining pumpkin mixture onto graham-cracker
crust. Carefully pour cream-cheese mixture on top
of pumpkin layer. Spoon dollops of reserved
pumpkin mixture onto cream-cheese layer. With
knife, cut and twist through cream-cheese layer to
get a swirl effect.
6. Bake cheesecake 1 hour. Turn off oven; let
cheesecake remain in oven 1 hour longer. Remove
cheesecake from oven. With small knife, loosen
cheesecake from side of pan to help prevent
cracking during cooling. Cool completely in pan on
wire rack. Cover and refrigerate cheesecake at
least 6 hours or overnight until well chilled. Remove
side of pan to serve.
This is a great on for around Thanksgiving
Lemon-Glazed Cheesecake
Serves: 8
Work Time: 30 minutes
Total Time: 9 hours
CRUST
2 cups graham cracker crumbs
6 tablespoons melted butter
2 tablespoons sugar
FILLING
3 (8 ounces) packages cream cheese,
softened
3/4 cup sugar
3 eggs
1/4 cup lemon juice
2 teaspoons grated lemon rind
2 teaspoons vanilla
TOPPING
2 cups sour cream
3 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
lemon strips, for garnish
strawberries, for garnish
mint Leaves, for garnish
GLAZE
1/2 cup sugar
1 1/2 tablespoons cornstarch
1/4 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup water
1/3 cup lemon juice
1 egg yolk
1 tablespoon butter
1 teaspoon lemon rind
CRUST
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.. In a medium bowl,
combine crumbs, butter and sugar thoroughly.
Press crust evenly onto bottom and sides of
buttered (9-inch) springform pan. Bake five
minutes. Cool.
FILLING
Beat cream cheese until soft and smooth. Add
sugar slowly, blending well after each addition.
Beat in the eggs, one at a time. Mix in lemon juice,
rind and vanilla. Blend well. Turn into springform
pan. Bake 35 minutes.
TOPPING
While cake is baking, blend sour cream. three
tablespoons sugar and vanilla. Remove cake from
oven. Gently spread sour cream mixture over top.
Return from oven and bake 12 minutes. Cool on
rack 30 minutes.
Spread with lemon glaze. Chill several hours or
overnight before removing sides of pan. Garnish
with lemon strips, strawberries and mint leaves.
GLAZE
In a heavy one-quart saucepan, mix sugar,
cornstarch and salt. Combine water, lemon juice
and egg yolk and add to sugar mixture. Cook over
low heat, stirring constantly, until the mixture
comes to a slow boil and is thickened. Add butter
and lemon rind. A llow to cool slightly, but spread
on cheesecake before the glaze cools too much
and sets.
Stephany
Re: ISO - Cheesecake recipes
Fri Aug 13 22:58:48 1999
The lemon cheesecake is now an offical blue ribbion recipe :-) Aren't fairs so much fun?
Coz
Re: ISO - Cheesecake recipes
Thu Aug 12 04:45:38 1999
I posted my white chocolate/Rasberry cheesecake receipe her back in I think it was June!
Allison
Re: ISO - Cheesecake recipes
Mon Aug 9 23:25:04 1999
I don't know what flavor you're looking for, but here's a good one...
BANANA SPLIT CHEESECAKE
Crust:
1 cup flaked coconut
1 cup roasted filberts
1/3 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup butter - melted
Combine the ingredients. Press into a buttered 9" springform pan. Refrigerate 5 minutes, than bake for 7 minutes in a 350 oven. Cool.
Filling:
1 1/2 lbs. cream cheese
1 cup granulated sugar
3 eggs
1 tsp vanilla
1/2 cup banana - mashed
1/2 cup strawberry puree
2 oz semi-sweet chocolate - melted
1 tbsp cocoa powder
Cream the cheese with the sugar. Beat in eggs one at a time. Stir in the vanilla. Divide this batter into 3 parts. Blend the banana into one part, the strawberry into
the second part, and the chocolate and cocoa into the third. Pour the chocolate batter into the crust, bake for 25 minutes. Carefully pour the banana batter over
the chocolate layer and bake for an additional 25 minutes. Pour the strawberry batter over and bake for 30 minutes. Turn the oven off, prop the door open and
leave for 30 additional minutes. Transfer to a cooling rack, cool to room temperature. Chill in refrigerator for at least 8 hours.
This is wonderful as is, but I like to frost the sides with whipped cream, pour some strawberry glaze on the top and garnish with fresh strawberries and
bananas. I don't know if this is very "New York", but it is very good. I also have a wonderful recipe for eggnog cheesecake, but I'll wait until the holiday season
to post it if anyone's interested.
Dolores
Re: ISO "Whipped Cream" Frosting ASAP
Sun Aug 8 10:31:23 1999
I have a recipe...on my RECIPES then Icing Recipes page. It is called 'Meringue Icing (like 7-minute). It probably will hold up. I have never stored one in the
fridge with it. Is there something to spoil, the reason you must refrigerate the cake? BTW, mine rewuires glucose. If you don't have that try subbing Karo
syrup.
Otherwise, Wilton makes a powdered whipped icing...but the store is closed of course. Then there is Bettercreme. But I know it won't stay until Tuesday made
today.
margaret
Re: ISO "Whipped Cream" Frosting ASAP
Sun Aug 8 14:46:55 1999
not really to spoil...just since I have to make it today then not serve till Tuesday..figured would need to refrigerate
Dolores
Re: ISO "Whipped Cream" Frosting ASAP
Mon Aug 9 09:01:30 1999
You are probably right. But a lot of bad things can happen...like colors running.
Dolores
R - Snicker bar cake(s)
Sat Aug 7 11:26:40 1999
---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: Snickers Cake
Categories: Cakes
Yield: 12 servings
1 German Chocolate cake mix
1/2 c Margarine
14 oz Carmels
1/3 c Milk
1 c Chocolate chips
1 c Chopped nuts
Mix cake as directed on package. Pour 1/2 of batter in 9x13 greased pan. Bake at 350 for 20 min.. While cake is baking, melt carmels, marg & milk. Stir til
smoothe. Pour over cake that has baked. Dot with choc chips & nuts. Pour remaining batter on top & bake at 275 for 20 min. & then 350 for 10 min.. Good
when served with whipped cream. Arlene Anderson
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---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: Snicker Bar Cake
Categories: Cakes, Desserts
Yield: 12 servings
18 oz Yellow cake mix
2 pk Instant pudding; 4 ser ea
2 c Oats
1/2 c Mayo (use real mayo)
1/2 c Powdered sugar
Mix all ingredients in a large bowl till moist. Form a ball - mash into a 9 x 13 greased pan . With sizzors "snip" bit size pieces of Snickers (5) and press into
dough. Bake 300 for 35 mininutes. If desired dust with 1/2 cup powdered sugar.
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---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: Snickers Cancy Bar Cake
Categories: Chocolate, Cakes
Yield: 10 servings
4 Eggs; separated
16 1 1/2oz Snickers Bars;
- cut up
1/4 c Water
2 tb Peanut butter, smooth
2 c Flour; unsifted
3/4 ts Baking soda
1/4 ts Salt
1 c Butter
2 c Sugar
3 ts Vanilla
1 1/4 c Buttermilk; divided
Combine, in the top of a double boiler, the cut-up Snickers bars, water, and peanut butter; heat and stir until well melted and blended. COOL. Mix together the
flour, baking soda and salt. Set aside. In a large bowl, cream
butter thoroughly; gradually add sugar and beat until fluffy. Beat in 4 unbeaten egg yolks and add vanilla; beat in the cooled candy bar mix, mixing until smooth
and adding 1/4 cup buttermilk. Stir in the flour mix alternately with the remaining 1 cup buttermilk; mix only until blended.
Gently fold in 4 stiffly beaten egg whites. Divide batter evenly between 2 greased and floured 9" SQUARE pans and bake in preheated 350~F oven for 45 ~ 55
minutes. Cool in pans on rack for 5 minutes, turn out, and finish cooling on rack. Serve with sweetened whipped cream.
-----
---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: WW Frozen Snicker Bars
Categories: Cakes, Favorite, Low-cal
Yield: 1 servings
-GINGER MARTIN
2 c Lite ice cream -
; {Softened 5 min}
1 c Lite non dairy cream topping
; {softened 5 min}
1/4 c Chunky peanut butter.
1 sm Sugar free choc.pudding;dry
Mix all together & beat W/ mixer for 5 minutes. Spread into 8" pan that has been sprayed W/ pam. Freeze over night. Makes 8 servings. Each serving = 1/2m,
1/2fa, 1/2fr, 1/2p 10 op cals
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C.S.
Re: ISO Mini Citrus Cheesecakes
Wed Aug 11 10:30:42 1999
I have made this in different ways. A caterer I worked for made them in the mini muffin pans and we put the Nilla Wafers in the bottom and then poured the
cheesecake mixture on top of that. You can't bake them in a water bath and they tended to puff, so I would spray down the oven before they went in and also,
on the lowest rack I would put a pan with water in it. Boil the water ahead of time, then pour it in when you add the cheesecakes. They are real pretty with a
little dollop of fruit on top. Like canned cherry pie filling, or blueberry etc. For citrus, I would add a bit of lemon and orange juice to the cheesecake mixture
along with finely grated zest.
The way that I make them at home is to make a sheet of cheesecake. I make the crust as usual (graham cracker) and press it into a 10-inch square cake pan.
Then I pour about 1/2 to 1-inch layer of cheesecake mixture and bake as I do my cheescakes (in a water bath). Chill and heat the bottom of the pan and turn
upside-down onto a saran wrap covered board and then flipp onto another board. This is how I make cheesecake bars for buffets, cookie trays etc. If they
must be round I like to cut them out with a cutter and then roll the sides in loose, freshly ground graham cracker crumbs. It finishes the sides very cleanly. I
find it easier than the mini muffin cups, and my customers prefer the graham cracker crust. I also do this with the pumpkin cheesecake and top with a rosette
of spiced whipped cream with freshly grated nutmeg over the top. People go mad for them!! I never have a problem with the scraps, my husband follows
behind salivating and gobbling up every crumb of scraps!!! They freeze beautifully too.
Michelle
Brownie Receipe
Fri Aug 6 12:52:46 1999
I don't know where I go this receipe from, & I haven't tried it yet.
Cream Cheese Brownies
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/3 cup semisweet chocolate chips
5 tablespoons shortening
1 cup white sugar
3 eggs
3 tablespoons cream cheese
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon almond extract
1/2 cup almonds, chopped
Preheat oven to 350° degrees F. Grease 9 inch square baking pan. In top of a double boiler, melt chocolate chips and shortening, stirring until smooth. Pour into
a large bowl and add sugar, cream cheese, and eggs. Beat well. Stir in vanilla and almond extract. Slowly add in flour, baking powder and salt, stirring
constantly. Fold in almonds and pour the batter into pan. Bake for 35 to 40 minutes, until toothpick comes out clean. Let cool in pan before cutting into bars.
Makes 18 bars
Michelle
Receipe
Fri Aug 6 12:51:21 1999
This is my families receipe. It is very delecious.
Cream Cheese Brownies
Chocolate Mixture:
4 oz. Baker's German Sweet Chocolate
3 Tbsp. Butter
Chocolate Layer:
2 Eggs
3/4 c. Sugar
½ tsp. Baking Powder
1/4 tsp. Salt
½ c. Flour
1 tsp. Vanilla
1/4 tsp Almond Extract
½ c. Chopped Nuts
Cheese Layer:
3 oz. Cream Cheese
2 Tbsp. Butter
1/4 c. Sugar
1 Egg
1 Tbsp. Flour
½ tsp. Vanilla
1.) To make Chocolate Mixture: Melt 1 package (4oz.) Baker's German Sweet Chocolate and Tbsp, over low heat. Stir, then cool.
2.) To make Cheese Layer: Cream 3 oz. cream cheese with 2 Tbsp. Butter. Gradually add 1/4 cup sugar; cream until fluffy. Blend in 1 egg, 1 Tbsp. Flour and
½ tsp. Vanilla. Set aside.
3.) To make Chocolate Layer: Beat 2 eggs, until light colored. Slowly add 3/4 cup sugar; beat until thickened. Add ½ tsp. Baking Powder, 1/4 tsp. Salt, and ½
cup Flour. Blend in Chocolate mixture, 1 tsp. Vanilla, 1/4 tsp. almond extract; add ½ cup chopped nuts.
4.) To Bake: Spread half the chocolate batter in a greased 8 or 9 inch square pan. Top with cheese mixture. Spoon the remaining chocolate batter over the top.
Zigzag knife through the batter (this should make a marbling effect). Bake at 350 degrees F. For 35 to 40 minutes.
Caesanea
Brownie
Fri Aug 6 23:22:26 1999
Sheba,
Here is a brownie recipe when made with cake flour it has a cake consistency. The topping also comes out like fudge.
I just made these yesterday with half cake flour and half flour. Made frosting,topped with nuts, then drizzled melted white chocolate over the nuts. Let me
know how they turn out. **I only use half/half because I was out of cake flour.
CHOCOLATE BROWNIES
Cream together: 1/2 cup margarine or butter(I use butter)and 1 cup cugar
Beat in 4 eggs
Add 1 16 oz. can chocolate syrup
1 cup flour
1/2 tsp. salt
1 tsp. vanilla
1/2 cup chopped nuts (optional)
Spray 9 x 13 inch pan with pam
Mix together with mixer until smooth
Pour batter in pan. Bake 25 min or more in a 325 degree oven
(DO NOT OVER COOK)test for doness.
FROST WHILE HOT!!
Frosting
Boil these ingreidents for 3 min:
1 1/2 cup sugar,6 tablespoons butter, 6 tablespoons evaporated milk
Remove from heat and add 3/4 to 1 cup semi-sweet chocolate bit. Add i tsp. vanilla stir until smooth. Then place on warm cooked brownies. Delicious!!
Coz
Re: ISO Kaluah icing?
Thu Aug 5 04:03:47 1999
This would be really good! Do you know about that egg yolk frosting I can't think what it's called-it is like the Italian buttercream but made with yolks instead
of whites and then add Kahula-so rich and yummy-I do this as a filling lots!! Also do the Italian buttercream and add Kahula for the outer frosting!! Yummy!!!!
I have the Italian receipe on my e-mail saved if you want it let me know-otherwise, if you have the cake bible-it's the same one!
Susan
Classic Buttercream Icing
Sat Aug 21 16:48:36 1999
Hi Coz: I was wondering if you were thinking about Classic Buttercream when you were mentioning an icing made in a similar manner to Italian buttercream
but using yolks instead of egg whites? Susan
Coz
Re: Classic Buttercream Icing
Sat Aug 21 17:59:09 1999
yes, I just made some last night!! I was blanking on the name of it at the time.
Susan
Re: Classic Buttercream Icing
Mon Aug 23 14:46:46 1999
Hi Coz: Do you find the Classic Buttercream too rich? I am using the recipe from the Cake Bible and I think it is too much for my liking. Is that the recipe you
are using? Thanks.
Coz
Re: Classic Buttercream Icing
Mon Aug 23 22:59:27 1999
That's the exact receipe I use!! It is very rich-sometimes I just keep it as a filling and don't frost the whole cake-the cake I did this weekend was a sheet cake
so I made it rich by doing the whole thing I figure people arn't getting big pieces-plus I was to lazy to make a second batch of frosting!!!
Susan
Re: Classic Buttercream Icing
Tue Aug 24 17:39:45 1999
Thanks for the response. I used it to frost the entire cake and I think your idea of using it for just the filling is a much better idea. It is so satiny and smooooth!
but way too much for what I was using it for. Thanks. Susan
margaret
"grease & flour" mixture
Mon Aug 2 19:04:28 1999
I saw some time ago a "recepie" for a mixture to grease & flour a cake pan with a pastry brush..wrote it down somewhere & now that I found the perfect
brush & a storage container..I can't find where I put the recepie!!!
Can someone please help!!!
THanks in advance!!
lynne
Re: "grease & flour" mixture
Mon Aug 2 22:42:27 1999
hi margaret;
i have always used equal parts (1 cup to 1 cup or whatever)
crisco (solid); crisco (oil); and flour.
i've heard others say if you live in a humid area to add at least 1/2 cup cornstarch.
beat in mixer until *very* light and fluffy.
i prefere to store mine in frig. i keep a round pastry brush (about 1" diameter) just for greasing my pans.
if you don't make say at least 4-6 cakes a wk, use only 1/3 cup each. this makes alot! :)
margaret
my "mixture"
Tue Aug 17 19:05:49 1999
Ok I made this using equal parts (1cup each) of Flour, Crisco Short. & Crisco oil....here's the thing...this is more of a liquid than a paste...is this correct??? For
some reason I was expecting it to be a thicker concoction!! Am afraid to use it till someone tells me its right! lol
thanks in advance
Michelle
pan coating
Wed Aug 4 15:27:43 1999
How many pans do coat with this mixture? How thick do you coat it? Does it effect the flavor of the cake? Does it matter what type of cake you are making?
lynne
Re: pan coating
Wed Aug 4 16:54:40 1999
no problem w/the ?s :)
it depends on what amount of measure you are using -- 1 cup ea or 1/3 cup or 1 qt each :)
i suggest starting out with only 1/4 or 1/3 cup each. this will make about 3 cups when finished.
since you use maybe a tablespoon per pan (very rough guess) you can see it will last awhile.
i have a special round pastry brush (about 1" in diameter) just for this job. i seldom wash it so it usually carries over grease from one time to the other. there is
nothing in this 'recipe' to spoil so it dosn't need washing. i keep it in the frig along w/the mixture between useages.
i just brush on so you can see it. if you see any shiny spots on your pan you don't have it covered -- so go back over it.
it does not effect the taste of the cake at all. i don';t think there is a cake recipe (except for angelfood) that dosn't call for greasing & flouring the pan. it is
absorbed into the cake & is never noticed when baking is complete.
if you have any trouble getting the cake out of the pan you probably didn't use enough coating.
Michelle
Pan coating
Wed Aug 4 15:24:57 1999
How long does it last? Does it have to be stored in the fridge?
Anonymous
? for Lynne
Mon Aug 2 22:52:41 1999
Do you grease the sides of your pans, or just the bottom? Thanks.
both (nt) — lynne, Tue Aug 3 01:53
Noi
Re: "grease & flour" mixture
Mon Aug 2 19:40:24 1999
This one is from Earlene's website under recipes.
www.earlenescakes.com
Pan Coat: 1 3/4 Cup Solid Crisco, 1/3 Cup Crisco or Wesson Oil and 2 1/2 Cups Flour Beat and store at room temperature (I store mine in an empty Crisco Can
- cut a hole in the lid for the brush handle) Apply to pans with a sturdy brush. Do Not grease the sides of your pans - only the bottoms
Lisa
Choc. Mayo Cake
Sun Aug 1 09:17:28 1999
This recipe was orginally found on the back of the hellmann's jar.
2 cups unsifted flou
2/3 cup unsweetened cocoa
1 1/4 tsps. baking soda
1/4 tsp. baking powder
1 2/3 cups sugar
3 eggs
1 tsp. vanilla
1 cup Hellmann's Real Mayonnaise
1 1/3 cups water
Grease and flour bottoms of two 9 x 1 1/2-inch round baking pans. In medium bowl stir together flour, cocoa, baking soda and baking powder; set aside. In
large bowl with mixer at high speed beat sugar, eggs ad vanilla, occasionally scraping bowl, 3 minutes or until light and fluffy. Reduce speed to low; beat in
mayonnaise. Add flour mixture in 4 additions alternately with water, beginning and ending with flour. Pour into prepared pans. Bake in 350 degree oven for 30
to 35 minutes or until cake tester inserted in center comes out clean. Cool in pans for 10 minutes. Remove; cool or wire racks. Frost as desired. Garnish with
sliced almonds. Makes two 9-inch layers.
I copied this recipe from the Best Recipes from the backs of boxes, bottles, cans and Jars.
Sharon
Apple Sour Cream Streusel Cake
Thu Jul 29 18:04:15 1999
Hi everyone!
This is not a decorated cake, but it is so fabulous I have to share it with you! When it's baking, it smells like you're cooking an apple pie and a coffee cake at the
same time! The recipe is from cakerecipe.com.
Apple Sour Cream Streusel Cake
Ingredients:
3/4 cup butter or margarine, softened
1 cup white sugar
3 eggs
1 cup sour cream
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 cups all-purpose flour
1/4 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoons baking powder
2 apples, peeled and sliced
2 tablespoons apple jelly
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
3/4 cup brown sugar
2 tablespoons butter or margarine, softened
1/4 cup chopped walnuts
Directions:
In a large bowl, cream 3/4 cup butter or margarine with the granulated sugar. Beat in the eggs, then the sour cream and vanilla.
In another bowl, stir together the 3 cups flour, salt, and baking powder. Beat into the creamed mixture. Turn half the batter into a greased and floured tube pan.
Sprinkle with half the streusel mixture.
To Make Streusel:
Mix together 1/2 cup flour, 1/4 teaspoon baking powder, ground cinnamon, brown sugar, 2 tablespoons of butter or margarine, and 1/4 cup chopped walnuts
until crumbly.
Lay the apple slices on top and dot with the jelly. Cover with the remaining batter and sprinkle with the remaining streusel. Bake the cake in a 350 degrees F
(175 degrees C) oven for 1 hour, or until it tests done with a toothpick. Transfer to a rack to cool. Makes 16 servings. Makes 1 - 9 or 10 inch tube cake
dhoward
GUMMI BEARS
Mon Jul 26 20:09:23 1999
ISO recipe for gummi bears, worms, etc.
any and all info would be appreciated. thank you
Dolores
R - Gummy Chews
Tue Jul 27 08:13:59 1999
I haven't tried these but it looks like it would do the job. From the Prodigy message board many years ago.
---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06
Title: Gummy Chews
Categories: Candies
Yield: 4 servings
-JEANESS THIBODEAU
3 c Fruit juice (any flavor)
5 pk Unflavored gelatin powder
In a mixing bowl combine 1c juice with the gelatin powder Bring 1c juice to a boil, then stir in gelatin mix. Add remaining juice & stir until gelatin is dissolved.
Pour into an 8x8 pan & chill until set. Use cookie cutters or your imagination to cut.
You might try to substitute koolaid for the juice for more flavors.
-----
Michelle
sour gummies
Tue Jul 27 11:20:59 1999
Does anyone know how to make the gummies that are sour? They usually have some sort of sugar coating.
dhoward
sour gummies
Tue Jul 27 20:50:35 1999
to make candy sour, u must use citric acid. it can be
purchased at Sugarcraft Add between 1/2 and 1 teaspoon (of the powdered type).
lynne
Re: Marble Cakes
Tue Jul 27 01:00:21 1999
make your best white or yellow cake recipe. remove about 1 cup of the batter; pour remaining into pan.
to the removed batter add 1/3 to 1/2 cup unsweetened coaco powder plus about 1/4 cup (or a little less) of salad oil (crisco).
drop from spoon into the white batter. stir lightly w/a knife to 'marble'. you may want to fold some in so it reaches the bottom of the pan. also before putting
pan in oven, drop it on counter top 3 or 4 times.
good luck. lynne
Allison
ISO-kosher fondant
Sat Jul 24 10:30:42 1999
Every recipe that I have found for rolled fondant calls for gelatin. Neither Knox nor Grayslake are kosher. I know that Wilton's rolled fondant is kosher, but it is
expensive to use on a regular basis and I've heard that homemade fondant tastes much better. Any advice?
Noi
Re: ISO-kosher fondant
Tue Jul 27 20:30:53 1999
Try Agar-Agar powder. It sold at health food store.
It is stronger than gelatin, but I substitute equal amount of Agar-Agar for gelatin in the recipe. Use very warm to hot water to dissolve the Agar-Agar.
Agar-Agar made from sea plant. I don't know if it's kosher or not.
Ruth
Re: ISO-kosher fondant
Sun Jul 25 09:38:31 1999
You can get kosher geletin at a health food store. I am Seventh Day Adventist and so I look for kosher items also.
Michelle
kosher
Tue Jul 27 22:56:51 1999
I don't mean to sound stupid, but what is kosher?
Allison
Re: kosher
Tue Jul 27 23:03:26 1999
Technically, kosher refers to foods that adhere to Jewish dietary law. I am not Jewish, but I do not eat pork. That is why I was looking for a gelatin substitute.
Gelatin can be derived from plants or animals, but commercially available unflavored gelatin (knox & grayslake) are derived from a combination of beef and
pork. I hope that I did not bore you with this information!
Patti
ISO - alcohol substitutes in cakes
Wed Jul 21 20:41:55 1999
I am new to this (since Jan.) and have been trying to learn about cake making and decorating from ACD magazine, the internet and anywhere else.( I have four
children and have difficulty getting to any organized classes) Everyone is so generous with information and recipes it has been wonderful! I have found some
wonderful recipes of Earlene Moore's I would love to try, but most of the people I bake cakes for as well as myself do not partake of any alcohol(religious
reasons). I am afraid to just leave out that much liquid (2/3 C.). Can I substitute an other liquid? Thank you for your help and experience
Allison
vodka substitute
Tue Jul 27 12:02:23 1999
It depends on the intended use of the vodka. I cannot recall seeing a recipe actually calling for vodka as a flavoring, but if you are refering to the use of vodka
as a paint base to use with luster dust - lemon extract is a suitable replacement.
Allison
alcohol substitutes
Sat Jul 24 10:20:32 1999
In The Wedding Cake Book by Dede Wilson, she suggests using flavored syrups - the same used in espresso and other coffee drinks. Monin is the brand that I
use. These are available at most supermarkets and coffee shops and are available in almost any flavor imaginable. You don't have to sacrifice taste!
Coz
Re: ISO - alcohol substitutes in cakes
Thu Jul 22 04:01:53 1999
When baking with alcohol, the actual alcohol bakes out and only the flavor is left-to prove this theory look at the great vanilla debate-real or artificial-(my sister
is finishing up her PHD in chemistry and worked as a food scientist-in order to keep the alcohol in there needs to be a chemical alteration that isn't in your
regular liquors-but yes, in the great vanilla debate!!) I respect religious beliefs in this area but because the alcohol would not be used as a intoxicant-would it be
acceptable to bake with?
BKeith
Re: ISO - alcohol substitutes in cakes
Thu Jul 22 09:05:05 1999
Sorry Coz, not true. Unless you're baking your cakes for several hours until they're quite dry, some of the alcohol will remain. It was "common knowledge" for
many years that the alcohol all cooked out. The reasoning is that alcohol has a lower boiling point than water, so it'll evaporate sooner.
Then someone actually did a study and found that common knowledge didn't hold up. The alcohol molecules bond with the water molecules in such a way as to
prevent them from evaporating nearly as quickly as you'd think. (I'm not a chemist, so I'm a little fuzzy on details). I've seen a chart, but don't think I have it
handy. I think I remember that after baking for 30-45 minutes or so, some 30-40% of the orignal alcohol content remains in the food.
That said, if we're talking about 2/3 cup a Kahlua with an alcohol content of 26.5% (I just checked my bottle -- I'll assume her homemade recipe is
comparable). The original alcohol content is about 1.4 ounces. After baking, if 40% remains, that'd be about .57 ounces, or a little more than a tablespoon of
actual alcohol. That's about the amount you'd get in a good stiff cocktail. So if you ate the entire cake (which, by the way, uses 3 cake mixes, so probably
enough for 50 or so wedding servings), you'd probably get a buzz. Of course you probably wouldn't notice the effect of the alcohol since you'd feel pretty
lousy with a tummy that full. ;)
But the point remains: the alcohol does not completely cook out. If you're worried about someone being affected by the remaining alcohol content, don't. If you
abstain from alchol for religious or other personal reasons, then leave it out and substitute with another liquid.
Coz
Re: ISO - alcohol substitutes in cakes
Thu Jul 22 10:44:05 1999
only the math genius!! So what do you think about using vanilla-that contains alcohol! Do you use real vanilla or a bakers vanilla-Does the vanilla bake out or is
that a myth? What about using the actual vanilla bean-to expensive for the everyday baking. My bottle of vanilla on the bottle says it contains 8.25% alcohol-My
bottle of pure vanilla says it contains 35% alcohol-that's as much as some cordials!!! Now I'm wondering-technically we should be buying our vanilla in a liquor
store?!
BKeith
Re: ISO - alcohol substitutes in cakes
Thu Jul 22 11:00:18 1999
And lemon extract has even more! One difference is that with vanilla containing 35% alcohol, you're probably only using a teaspoon or two. With liqueurs,
you're using several tablespoons. So the total alcohol quantity is much less.
Technically, if you abstain from alcohol completely, you should avoid extracts with alcohol. There are some alcohol-free extracts and essences. I believe health
food stores carry them.
The reason you don't have to buy your vanilla in the liquor store is that it's not terribly drinkable. You could get pretty sloshed by tossing back Kahlua. But I bet
you wouldn't take more than one sip of vanilla extract before you decide the high isn't worth the trouble.
Jennifer
Re: ISO - alcohol substitutes in cakes
Thu Jul 22 14:11:31 1999
Plus, drinking vanilla extract can cause, lets say some "runny" side effects. I remember hearing this on the news several years ago because some kids got very
sick trying to get drunk off of vanilla!
I've always suspected that all of the alcohol does not cook out. I am VERY sensitive to alcohol, and when I made Kahlua Fudge cake the first time and ate a
piece as soon as it came out of the oven, I got a slight buzz! Didn't last long, but I could definately feel it. I always tell people the cakes with liquors in them are
definately for adults only.
Sheri
Re: ISO - alcohol substitutes in cakes
Fri Jul 23 10:17:19 1999
I know exactly what you mean Jennifer. I made a Kahlua cake recently and added a little more Kahlua than usual. I had extra batter, so I made a few cupcakes.
I had one shortly after it came out of the oven and I definitely felt a little woozy! I was under the impression the alcohol baked out as well, but I guess not.
Jennifer
Re: Kahlua Fudge Cake
Fri Jul 23 10:03:23 1999
I simply substituted about 2/3 C Kahlua for part of the water for one mix. You might want to adjust the amount for your taste. It did make the cake taste richer,
and more complex. Although it did taste better than just the regular cake, I personally don't think it's worth the added expense. Earlene Moore has a recipe for
making your own "Kahlua" that is alot cheaper, but I've never tried it. It was in ACD earlier this year, along with her cake recipe.
Michelle
Receipe
Fri Jul 23 10:12:13 1999
Do you use 2 mixes and if so do you do them seperatley or together. Do you use a certain cake mix? I love Kahlua cake and brownies, but I haven't made them
yet.
Jennifer
Re: Receipe
Sat Jul 24 08:22:18 1999
I do however many mixes I need, just keep the ratio of Kahlua the same. It works well with either a devil's food or chocolate fudge mix. I use Betty Crocker.\
Coz
Re: ISO - alcohol substitutes in cakes
Thu Jul 22 11:20:30 1999
Your right! My lemon extract is 57% alcohol(Can you tell my computer is by my kitchen!!) So if someone is to avoid alcohol it is all or
nothing-technically,these people can't buy many foods at all in the grocery store because prepared foods will not use those health food brands. This is very
interesting!!
Jennifer
Re: ISO - alcohol substitutes in cakes
Thu Jul 22 00:22:25 1999
Yes, you can substitute another liquid. For kahlua (sp?) you could just use strong coffee, or water (but then it would just be regular chocolate cake). For Grand
Marnier, substitute orange juice, for others substitute water and 1 tsp of an artificial flavoring (brandy, rum, strawberry, etc). Most of these types of recipes
were initially developed by substituting the liquor for part of the water to begin with.
Re: ISO - alcohol substitutes in cakes
Wed Jul 21 21:15:01 1999
You should be able to subsitute it with another liquid. But the alcohol is there for taste too. So you need to make up that somehow.
Sandy
Can someone help me
Wed Jul 21 13:02:45 1999
Is there a trick to getting the cake out of a 1/2 sheet pan.
When i lifted the pan up almost all of the center of the cake stayed in the pan, and the edges where on the cooling rack. I am new at this so any help would be
greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.
Jamie
Re: Can someone help me
Wed Jul 21 22:43:43 1999
I can't remember where I read this (maybe on this board), but you spray your pan with something like Pam and "flour" it with granulated sugar. I was a little
skeptical at first, but it works. The cake just flies out by itself! I especially like it for chocolate cakes, because it doesn't leave powder residue like flour does. I
would give it a try on a smaller cake first to see if you like how it turns out. I think it's pretty slick! :)
Re: Can someone help me
Wed Jul 21 23:31:42 1999
Do you spray the sides too or just the bottom?
I spray the sides and bottom (nt) — Jamie, Fri Jul 23 01:38
BKeith
Re: Can someone help me
Wed Jul 21 13:54:18 1999
Was it a new pan? I find that the first time I use a pan, cake will stick to it unless I "season" it first. Nothing nearly so elaborate as seasoning cast iron -- just
wash it, put the empty pan in a 350 degree oven, and leave it there for 20 minutes or so. Take it out, let it cool, and it should work a little b